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A85769 The throne of David, or An exposition of the second of Samuell wherein is set downe the pattern of a pious and prudent Prince, and a clear type of of [sic] the Prince of Princes Christ Iesus the sonne of David and his spirituall kingdome by William Guild D.D. and minister of Gods word at King-Edward in Scotland. Guild, William, 1586-1657. 1659 (1659) Wing G2212; Thomason E984_8; ESTC R207805 271,425 357

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finding that it was but one alone that was running the King conjectures that it was the bearer of tydings the reason of this conjecture being from common experience for if the Army had been overthrown not one but many had been seen flying and reparing to the City but being victorious and busily occupied in following and dividing the prey as Sisera was thought to have been exercised Judg. 5. 30. Therefore one onely was sent to report the Victory who in his drawing neerer beeing discovered to be Ahimaaz the Son of Zadok David conjectures the newes to be good by the goodnesse of the bearer and who first in the general reports that all was well thereafter most religiously as became the pious Son of such a Father he ascribes the praise of the victory and of the deliverance of Davids Enemies into his hand to God onely not to the wisdome of David or valour of Joab as a flatterer would have done therefore blesses the Lord for that happy successe and when he was asked by David how the young man Absolom was he warily and wisely remembring the cause why Joab would not had him the first reporter dissembleth his knowledge thereof till Cushi who came after him answered Wishing that all the Kings Enemies were as that young man is Whereupon the King justly apprehending that he was killed was much moved and having retired himself to his Chamber made a grievous lamentation for him For these three causes for which as we have formerly said he had given direction to deale gen●ty with him and not to touch him OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 19. IN Ahimaaz his rejoycing at the Victory and desire to carry the new●s thereof to David that he might also rejoyce We see the sympathy that ought to be amongst the Godly that as they are willed to weep with them that weep like fellowfeeling members of one body and as they are willed so to do 1 Pet. 3. 8. So ought they to rejoyce with them who re and especially at the prosperity of Gods Church and people and their deliverance from their Enemies and that the Lord has manifested his justice on them as his mercy towards his own 2. In Ahimaaz desiring from Ioab leave to go and a warrant from him who was chief in power to give him a call and runnes not unsent to tell these glad tydings We see it is the duty of inferiours to submit to the direction of their superiours and especially that the bearers of the glad tydings of salvation should not runne before they be sent and have a call from those who have power to give it them in the Church of Christ Though like Ahimaaz they be never so willing or forward or able also to discharge that function 3. Vers 27. When David is in greatest fear and solicitude concerning the event of the battle he gets good newes of a happy successe and victory even so when the Godly are in greatest feares dangers and difficulties the Lord in their extremity shewes his owne gracious deliverance and opportunity witnesse Jacobs deliverance from Esau Israels at the red Sea Davids from Sauls oruelty his people 's from Hamans bloody plot Eliahs from Achab Peters from Herod Act. 12. And many more others therefore let none despare of the Lords care of them as he had of Daniel and the three Children though they seem to be like the Lamb in the Lyons paw but in a holy confidence let them constantly rely on him 4. David speaking of Ahimaaz Zadok the Priests Sonne sayes He is a good man and brings good tydings joyning well these two together as indeed they ought to be in all the messengers and Ministers of the Gospel in whose mouth the good and glad tydings of the Gospell is put to declare to Gods people of the Summe of Davids victory over all our spirituall Enemies and of our deliverance from them and their overthrow that as the newes is good so they should be good men that carry them their carriage being suitable to their calling and message both holy that their life belies not their tongue nor that it be not said of them as of he Pharisees they say but doe not or as Psal 50. 16. What hast thou to do to declare my statutes or to take my covenant into thy mouth seeing thou hatest to be reformed 5. How welcome was Ahimaaz to David when he brought these newes of his Armies safety and that all was well and how much more welcome should they be And their feet counted beautifull on the mountains who like the Angels at Christs birth bring the glad tydings of salvation to the Lords people and as the Galatians welcomed Paul Gol. 4. 14. As an Angel of God even as Christ Jesus 6. Vers 28. Ahimaaz blesses the Lord for the Victory and ascribes the same onely to him who is the Lord of hostes and neither to Davids wisdome in directing nor Joabs and the Armies valour in executing but onely to the Lords power and Almighty Arme who had given the same Thereby teaching all men in all conditions or successe of affaires to look higher then to instruments and to acknowledge him to be supreame governour to whom the glory of all the good we have belongs that we may say Not unto us but to thy name be the glory and praise for ever 7. V. 32. As David hears the joyfull newes of the Victory so he hears by Cushi the sorrowfull tydings of his Sonne Absoloms death which he so laments Whereby we see how the Lord tempers the cup which he gives mixing to his own some sowrenesse with their sweetnesse so that their joy here is neither full as it shall be hereafter Psal 16. 11. Nor unmixed lest we should be too much inamored with this life and cloyed with Worldly delights contentments therefore our sweetest roses have their prickles Et nil omni ex parte beatum 8. Here likewise we see the miserable condition of civill and intestine warre troubles that in these even such Victories that are obtained by the party prevailing are not without sad losss of some who were dear or neer unto them as is said of the warres between Caesar and Pompey Bella gerit placuit nullos habitura triumphos as our proverb sayes Wherein we lose a friend with a foe which should disswade from civill or intestine division and dissent and perswade to peace and unity both in Church and Commonwalth 9. As has been said on the 5. Verse and explication of the charge given to Joab and the others concerning Absoloms preservation and the causes thereof so here the cause of Davids lamenting for his death was especially with intuition first of his own sins of adultery and the murther of Vriah as the cause why he was so sharply corrected in him who was his Son and a part of himself and which all of us ought to look unto when we are corrected in the persons of our Children or any that are neer and dear unto
escape as a bird out of the snare witnesse Hamans Gallowes Daniels Lyons denne the 3. Childrens firy Fornace and Susannas Judgment turned over on the two elders with many more and recent practic●s of the adversaries of Religion discovered disappointed and punished death which they prepared for others being first made there own portion It is good then for us ever to have our eyes with good Jehoshaphat towards the Lord and his protecting providence committing our causes to him for he will repay and we expecting his good time to possesse our souls in patience Also 1 Sam. 22. 18. He slew the Lord Priests and Levites with the sword and now by the sword their blood is avenged on him 7. The wonderfull providence of God herein likewise may be seen that David being amongst the Philistims and in such credit with the King of Gath yet his hand is kept clean of the blood of Saul and of Israel being commanded by the remanent Princes of the Philistims to go back because they distrusted him which albeit he thought it a disgracefull reputation yet at last he found that it turned to the best as all things do to the godly being hereby delivered from the guilty imputation of the blood of Saul and of Israel by the provident grace of God which he should have incurred if he had gone foreward and in respect that he went back by command eschewing on the other part either the blame of timorous cowardlinesse or any other of ingratitude or whatsoever the Philistims could charge him withall 8. V. 5. David in his frequent inquisition is here an example to all men but to Judges especially not to trust before they diligently trye for too hasty credulity and facility to credit whatsoever is obtruded to believe whether in temporall or spirituall things without due tryall foregoing is and ever hath beene hurtfull Therefore the men of Berea are commended for searching the Scriptures if those things which Paul taught were so or no and it is the Apostles command to trye the Spirits whether they be of God or no before we believe them Salomon would wisely trye which of the two harlots spoke truly before he would adjudge the Child to either of them and for lack of tryall by what Spirit the old Prophet spake Iddo was seduced and destroyed by a Lyon in the way 9. Vers 9. In the second more particular report of Sauls death we see qualis vita finis ita a wicked life hath oftenest a godlesse and desperate death witnesse Abimelech of Sechem Achitophell Zimri Judas and others and in this place Saul wounded by the Archers next running himself on his own sword and to be dead outright urging an Amalekite to come upon him for that effect let men live then the life of the righteous if they would dye the death of the righteous and if they would dye in the Lord let them live in the Lord Revel 14. 13. 10. We see here that blood requires blood at Gods hands be what priviledged Person a man will be before the World Saul had shed innocent blood especially that of the Lords Priests upon a wrong accusation by the information of Doeg therefore though a King his blood must be shed partly by the hand of his Enemy 2. by his own hand and lastly by the hand of a base Amalekite So ever like sins almost craves alike punishments witnesse Pharaohs land plagued with blood for the blood of the Israelite males his first borne destroyed as he destroyed theirs and he with his Army drowned as he drowned their Children in water likewise Adonibezeks just retribution Judg. 1. 7. Which he there acknowledgeth confirmeth the same 11. The fearfull terrour of a desperate accusing conscience appears in Sauls death making him weary of his life for anguish is upon me saith he and makes mee greedily to expostulat and seek after death thinking somewhat thereby to be eased but alass that worm dyeth never the gnawing thereof rather beginning after death then ending by death witnesse the like terrour torture of this fury Judas and many more who have become reuthlesse butchers and burrean's of themselves fugare conscientiam ab ea frustra fugere nitentes essaying but in vain to chase away from the conscience as if it were possible to flie from themselves and falling in the flame as we say by flying the frying pan 12. Vers 8. Herein is the just judgement of God manifest that Saul is now murthered by an Amalekite whom he had against Gods expresse command by Samuel preserved Let no man therefore be wiser nor through preposterous pity seem more mercifull then God but spare where he commands to spare and strik where he commands so to doe otherwise they shall find it to be true which experience too well hath taught that those whom Magistrates spare is by indulgence and abuse of the sword they become their cutthroats or griefs as the Cananits which being tolerated in the Land were to the Israelites thornes in their sides and prickes in their eyes to condemne therefore the Innocent and let the guilty go free are both alike abomination to the Lord saith Salomon and this David also found in sparing incestuous Amnon and murdering Absolom 13. V. 9. This Amalekite obtrudes Sauls own desire to be the warrant of his fact which hereafter we see is admitted no excuse by David wherein as we see the nature of the wicked to be ready to commit villany upon slender motives so we see that a wicked command upon no pretext ought to be obeyed neither can it be free from the check of conscience nor punishment of upright justice all pretenses being but like Adams figtree leaves or his naughty excuse of his wifes entisement 14. The respects of Davids mourning for Saul Jonathan and the People both internall or spirituall and externall or naturall I mentioned before onely this is to be observed that there is a double death to be lamented of Magistrates the one corporall as here the other spirituall which is the corruption of their manners and as it is most prejudiciall to Church or Commonwealth so is it most to be deplored of all and this made Samuel to go home to Ramah and lament for Saul all his dayes this spirituall death is a sure fore runner oftimes of a fearfull temporall 15. V. 15. We see here the happy beginnings of a godly Kingdome in the reward of this reporter consisting in two points 1. in the rejecting of dissimulate Hypocrisy cunning flattery whereby this Amalekite had covered his greedy design of reward by counterfeiting the behaviour of those who deplored a publick calamity by doing humble observance to David by reporting a peece of acceptable service done unto him as he supposed and by bringing Sauls Crown unto him 2. In executing upright Justice upon him who had confessed with his own mouth Ces-majesty or treason whereby David doth as he would be done to and cleareth himself hereby
to the end of the Chapter is set downe Davids ordering of the Kingdome by administration of justice in his owne person to all his people now setled in peace as also by electing and appointing fit officers and rulers delegate and subalterne to himselfe to governe both in the Church and in the Commonwealth The first warre then which David had was with the Philistines who were descended from the Egyptians whose progenitor was Misram the second sonne of cursed Ham infidells in religion and Capitall enemies to the people of God whom David sublued and took their strongest Citie M●th●● Ammah from them which is by interpretation the bridle of Ammah because be●ng situated on strong hills it hindred the Israelites to overcome the same The second warre was against the Moabites descended of Lot that incest ●o ●s copulation with one of his own daughters in the time of his drunkenness as we read Gen. 19. 37. Of whom it is said that he measured them with a line by a Metaphor from Artizans that measure their work so or from measurers of land whereby is shewed that he destroyed the two parts of them and kept only the third part alive The third warre was against Hadadezer King of Zobah whose proper name was Adad as Pharaoh was of the Egyptian Kings The fourth warre was with the King of Syria whose name is not here exprest but his chiefe Citie and country Damascus lying between the hill Hermon and Libanus now called Caelosyria the cause of which warre was because they took part with H●dadezer against David The fifth warre vers 14. Is against the Edomites in whole townes being subdued he put Carlson's and which was done by Abi●h●i the sonne of Zerviah as we read 1 Chron. 18. 12. OBSERVATIONS 1. FRom these severall warres here spoken of we learne That all warres are not unlawfull as we have shewed before on 2 Sam. 2. 17. at length against Anabaptists 2. More particularly that these warres of David against the persons and Nations before named were lawfull we may see 1. Because the destruction and subdueing of these enemies to Israel was fore prophesied by Balaam Num. 24. 17. And God ma● David the instrument of fulfilling of this prophesy 2. They ha● incroached upon the territories and bounds of the land whi●● the Lord had given to Israel and was divided unto them Joshua 3. It is said vers 6. and 14. That in all these whether soever he went the Lord preserved David which shewes 〈◊〉 he was walking in Gods waies to which only his preservatio● is promised and that he had a good cause in hand and inte●●ded them not either out of pride the mother of contention 〈◊〉 covetousness as we see vers 11. But only made these warre upon a good ground and for a right end to wit the glory 〈◊〉 God and accomplishing his will and the good of his people and their quiet and freedome from such insolent and infesting enemies as they had at divers times proved as we see in the book of the Judges and late reigne of Saul 3. The Lord had promised to David to build him a house and as he had hitherto done to make him a great name chap. 7. 9. yet he is not idle but use● the lawfull meanes to teach us to do the like when we look on the promises of God of salvation Phil. 2. 12. Or protection Act. 27. 31. Or providing for us Gen. 3. 1● c. So that we should neither tempt God by not using the meanes nor yet distrust God by confiding in the meanes only 4. All this which was done by David unto these wicked nations was as is said fore-prophesied by Balaam and yet before this performance 400. yeares and more had intervened whereby we see 1. The Lords lenity and long suffering patience which should have led them to repentance 2. The truth of the Lords threatnings at last as well as of his promises therefore let not the Godly be discouraged that their enemies are not presently or in short time punished for the Lord suffers them to fill their cup and at last he will come though with leaden feet yet with an iron heavy hand to crush them as a pot harde in pieces 5. David slew the Syrians who came to succour Hadadezer against him Whereby we see that it is dangerous to assist the wicked against the Godly or to be pertakers with any in an ill cause or course as the example of Jehofaphats association with Ahab testifies 1 King 22. 8. 6. Vers 6. and 14. Davids fortification and putting Garri●ons in Syria of Damascus and in Edom for conservation of his conquest Shewes that piety and prudence may well consist together and as the Poet speaks Non minor est virtus quam querere parta tueri 7. Where it is said that the Lord preserved David wheresoever he went we see 1. Who is the preserver of the Godly from all danger in the midst of perill's and from whom therefore they should seek the same 2. How good and carefull a Master the Lord is of his servants and their safety as we see Gen. 15. 1. and Psal 84. 11. Yea in death it selfe Psal 23. 4. Which should be a great motive and encouragement to serve him 8. We see by Gods preserving of David whethersoever he went not only Gods generall omnipresence withall but also his particular and speciall presence in mercy and for their good with his own because they walk in his waies and as acknowledging this his presence and alseeing eye 9. Vers 11. Davids giving of the rich spoile of these nations whom he subdued and dedicating of them to the Lord together with the rich gifts of gold silver and brasse which Toi King of Hamath sent unto him not onely clears him that he undertook not these warres for covetousnesse but also shewes his thankfullnesse to God as author of his victories and his religious and bountifull royall disposition to Religion and the advancement thereof worthy to be imitated by all Princes and others and farre contrary to the disposition of most men now adayes who have no publicke Spirits or are for pious workes but onely study to their owne private commodity 10. Vers 14. We see the Edomites are counted amongst these Enemies to Israel whom David subdued who were come of Esau Israels elder Brother and yet though of one blood from Isaac and should as Brethren been friends to Israel they were their infesting Enemies Whereby we see how weak a band of union or amity nature is without grace which indeed is the strongest tie of love and true solid friendship the communion of saints 11. Vers 15. After he had subdued his Enemies David now gives not himself to ease and sport or the like as many Princes do but like a good King in his own Person he Ministers Justice unto all his people and commits it not altogether and onely to other deputies under him A worthy example for all Kings to follow as we see Solomon
despaires not for the extremities of true fortitude are presumptuous confidence and desperate diffidence the midest being moderate feare with hope the one whereof breeds tempting of God and diffidence is the mother of despaire Therefore let men in afflictions feare God as a punisher of sinne in justice but yet hope in God for mercy 4. Where David saies to his servants make speed to depart lest Absolom over take us suddenly and smite the Citie with the edge of the sword We see that it is the part of a prudent Prince or any other who are wise timely to fore see and prevent dangers before they come and neither to contemne appearances of what may befall or to sleep in careless security as those of Laish did Judg. 18. 27. As also to be carefull for the good and safety of their people 5. We see here also Davids condition contrary to Absoloms Davids being like a comedy with a sad and sorrowfull beginning but having a happy deliverance and joyfull ending whereas Absoloms condition is like a tragedy a pompous and joyfull beginning with joyfull acclamation as King and a great following but a tragicall and sorrowfull ending and even such is the case and condition of the Godly and the wicked as we see Psal 73. And in the example of Joseph David and Saul the rich glutton and Lazarus c. And here of David and Absolom therefore let no man judge of the Godly by their crosses and afflictions that they who are not in Gods favour are unhappy neither let any man Judge of Gods Works by their beginnings as the former examples may teach us but look to their end and as we may see Psal 126. 5 6. 6. David has a good cause but few followers in respect of those who followed Absolom with whom was the multitude of all Israel as vers 12. and 13. And yet in the end is victorious even so it fareth oftimes with good causes And in speciall with the cause of God which in the time especially of Antichrists prevailing as before in the time of Eliah under Ahab had few followers therefore compared unto two witnesses Revel 11. And as it was likewise when the Arrian heresie so prevailed that as Jeronie testifies the whole world groaned under the same and wondered that it was turned Arrian but in the end the truth has prevailed and in the end shall prevaile more and more when that mysticall whoore shall be made naked and her flesh eaten and she burnt with fire Revel 17. 16. and 18. 8. 7. Vers 16. Davids leaving of his ten Concubines to keep the house which was his only intention was not without divine and secret providence that by their defiling by Absolom the Lords Word by Nathan might be fulfilled Chap. 12. 11. and his polygamie punished So that many things falls out beyond mens intention or expectation for the punishment of sinne wherein we see not the finger of God and performance of his word till they come to pass 8. Vers 25. In Davids sending back the Priests and Levites with the Ark to Jerusalem we see the Jurisdiction that the civill Magistrate has over Church-men according to that Apostolicall precept Rom. 13. 1. To command them to do their office and punish them if they transgress either in negligence in their spirituall function or against the lawes of the republick as we see in Salomon punishing Abiathar for his conspiracy with Adoniah in 〈…〉 likewise in punishing the Arrians and herein David commanding the Priests and Levites to returne to Jerusalem to execute their office 9. David likewise for his preservation relyes only on the mercy of God and that God would work that work without the presence of the Ark albeit it was the externall sacrament and signe of Gods presence whereupon we ground this generall That grace or remission of sinnes comes from the free mercy of God in Christ and is not tyed to sacraments which as they ought not to be contemned being necessary as we say necessitate precepti but not that they are so necessary necessitate medii that grace and salvation should be thought to be tyed unto them 10. Vers 26. Where David saies Let the Lord do to me what seemeth good to him In him we see the duty of a Godly soule under any cross to submit humbly to the good will of God as our Saviour said Let this cup pass from me notwithstanding not my will be done but thine O Father and indeed this is the work of one truly humbled and mortified and is a presage of comfort and deliverance in the end 11. Vers 30. Likewise in Davids going bare-foot and weeping as he went we see his right apprehension that this proceeded from the hand of God correcting him for his former sins before whom therefore he humbles himselfe after this manner Which teaches us the right use of corrections that they serve us as a Pedagogy to repentance for our sinnes for there is no evill towit of punishment in the Citie which God does not and therefore as Hos 6. 1. We should turne to him who smites us and whose fatherly hand chastises us for our good as we see Heb. 12. 10. And therefore the Lord uses bloody tyrants as Nebuchadnezzar and the King of Assyria Herod and others as Absolom here but as rods in his hand to execute his judgments as he does sometimes insensible creatures against the wicked as water fire the aire the sea the earth and the basest creatures as lice and vermine wherewith he plagued Pharaoh and Herod 12. Vers 15. Having spoken and observed all the former in David we see next in the persons of his Servants a laudable and worthy example of fidelity to their Master and of obedience to his just commands with all promptitude being ready and offering to do what he should direct them The like we see in Abrahams servant Gen. 24. And which is injoyned to all others Ephes 5. 6. 13. Vers 21. In Ittai the Gittite and his 600. men that were strangers their constant resolution to abide with David and take part with him in life and death when his own Son had unnaturally rebelled against him and sought after both his life and estate We see and collect an argument of courage and comfort to the godly afflicted that when those who are neerest foresake them or become their Enemies the Lord will never forsake them but stirre up strangers to assist them and be their truest friends and comforters As we see in Joseph when he was hated and sold by his brethren in the friendship likewise of Achish King of Gath to David when he was persecuted by his own Father in Law Saul of Jethro likewise Prince of Midian to Moses when he was put in such danger by one of his own people of Ebedmelech the Ethiopians favour to Jeremie chap. 38. And of Ittai's assistance here of David in his greatest distresse and desertion For the Lord has the hearts of all men in his hands and if
as we see in the plagues of Egypt the fire of Sodom the punishment of Korah the mockers of the Prophet Elishai and others Let not the wicked then expect impunity some way or other in the Lords own time here or at farthest after death hereafter 9. Absolom is punished by that wherein he most delighted for his hair was no small part of his beauty nor matter of his pride Where we see what it is to glory and be proud of any earthly benefit and that that part which is misused by man to sin is commonly imployed by God to revenge 10. Neither is it without speciall and divine providence that the place of the battle is the wood of Ephraim that Absolom in a great oak thereof might finish his ungodly life in an ignominious manner so that while like Jehu he is marching towards it in persuit of his Godly parent he is but hastning thereby to the gallowes and his own destruction 11. Vers 10. A private souldier sees him hanging and tells it to Joab but would not kill him because of the reverence and obedience to the Kings command concerning Absolom A good part in private men and subjects to reverence and obey the Lawfull commands of their superiours and not to do any thing of concernment without a warrant or call from them that are in authority 12. Vers 14. Joab upon that intelligence sees him and smites him through the heart in which that hatefull rebellion first was hatcht with three darts so that what the souldier forbore in obedience Joab doth in zeale not fearing to prefer his soveraignes safety to his indulgent command and more tendring the life of the King and peace of his country then the weake and fond affection of too indulgent a father Especially seeing by Gods Law Deut 21. 21. A rebell Childe should dye and by martiall Law a publicke Enemy may be killed in the field The which teaches that the publicke good ought to be preferred before private interests or relations Especially by publicke persons 13. All Israel did not afford so firme a friend to Absolom as Ioab had been who but he suborned the Woman of Tekoah to sue for the recalling of Absolom from his exile Who but he went to fetch him from Geshur to Ierusalem And who but he who at last reconciled him fully to his Father David Yet now he who formerly was a Solicitour for him is his executioner and has justly forgotten himself any more to be a friend to him who had forgotten himself to be a Sonne and to such a Father and turned Enemy to him So that we see that with honest hearts all respects either of blood or friendship ought to cease in the case of treason 14. Vers 15. Ioab not onely peirces his heart with darts who had peirced his Fathers heart with so many griefs after that he was lift up to an oke who had lifted himself up against his King but he is also mangled with many wounds by Ioabs armour bearers who had wounded his parent with so many wounds of sorrowes and mangled and divided all Israel by his rebellion So that as a man sinnes oftimes like Adonibezek and Pharaoh he is in like manner punished As we see also Revel 16. 6. 15. Vers 16. Ioab at last having obtained the Victory sounds a retreat and with holds his Army from persuing Israel Wherein appeares Ioabs prudence and what should be the like wisdome of commanders to put a difference between the heads of a faction and a seduced multitude and to pity the one while they take revenge on the other 16. Vers 17. Absolom is cast in a pit in the wood and a heap of stones upon him who for a glorious and Princely tombe had reared up a simptuous pillar like the Piramids of Egypt for conserving his name and memory in the Kings dale which therefore he called after himself Absoloms place Where we see how the wicked are oftimes disappointed in their ambitious designes as the builders of Babell were and are more carefull for conserving their name in memory or remembrance then in keeping a good conscience or to be carefull of their souls salvation and to do that which by shewing charity and doing of good works would perpetuate their name here and receive approbation and remuneration in the day of their accounts hereafter 17. We see here that although Absolom had three Sonnes Chap. 14. 27. Yet there is no Sonne left him the Lord by their death having so chastised him by which because he would not be amended and leave off his wickednesse but rather increase therein Therefore after the rod he takes now the axe as it were and finally destroyes him leaving him no posterity to perpetuate his memory but in place thereof a heap of stones upon him every one whereof to be a witnesse as it were and a proclamer of his detestable villany and to eternize his infamy II. SAM Chap. 18. from the 19. vers to the end FOllowes now the report of the event of the battle And 2. how David is affected for the death of Absolom In the report we have 1. A contest between Ahimaaz who desires to be the first reporter and Joab the subject whereof was if it was expedient or not that Ahimaaz should be the first reporter Ahimaaz takes the affirmative Joab the negative Ahimaaz reasons are 1. From his Person Let me now runne as if he would say I have before brought tydings from my Father Zadok to David of the event of Achitophels Counsell and Hushai's defeat thereof and therefore it is fittest that I likewise now runne and bring tydings to David of the event of the battle 2. From the Person of the King now in great perplexity of mind till he hear of the event of the battle and who has gotten the Victory 3. From the nature of the report Good tydings that the Lord hath avenged him of his Enemies Which will make him gracious to his Prince which subjects desire to be On the contrary Joab disswades him therefore by these reasons 1. From the time it is not expedient thou beare the message this day seeing another time will offer thee a more favourable argument by reason of the mixture of that which will be sorrowfull with the victory which is joyfull 2. From this subject of the report in particular that the Kings Son is dead and therefore the reporter thereof will not be acceptable knowing Davids great affection to Absolom as he shew thereafter Therefore Joab directs Cushi one of the Kings servants Vers 29. With the newes to David But notwithstanding Ahimaaz insists to go likewise and through importunity prevailes with Joab and being dismissed and running by the way of the plaine overrunneth Cushi who for a shorter way had taken the Wildernesse and coming in fight he is spied by one of Davids watchmen who was upon the the roof of the gate of the wall of the City and who accordingly cryed and told the King and
whom there is no shaddow of change 15. Amasa is directed to assemble all Judah to David in three dayes Which shewes that in suppressing of sudden insurrections there is need of speed and the least delay in rebellion is dangerous and may prove irrecoverable 16. Vers 9. How friendly doth Joab salute Amasa with his tongue how kindly kisses he him with his lippes but how cruelly killes he him with his hand as he had done to Abner before Whereby we see that there is no enmity so dangerous as that which comes like Jails to Sicera Jud●s to Christ and Joabs here to Amasa masked with love for open hostility calls us to our guard but there is no fence against a trusted treachery Thus soiritually dealeth the world with our soules it kisses us and stabbs us at once if it did not embrace us with one hand it could not murther us with the other the evill of whose temptation like Joab his sword we advert not more then Amasa took heed to Joabs sword God deliver us therefore from our trust therein and we shall be the safer from the danger thereof 17. The cause of this treacherous murther in Joab was his pride not enduring that any should be put in his roome and his envy at Amasa's preferment though so neer in kinne unto him Which shewes unto us what dangerous and damnable vices pride and envy are and what bad fruits the same doth produce as we see they did before in the murther of Abner And as pride doth here in bursting all bands to God King Country and kindred 18. Amasa likewise now being in peace and preserment and expecting no harm receives that reward which he should have received in warre when he was following Absolom and leader of his Army God then the righteous judge of the world we see has his own times of punishing though magistrates forbeare And God is just in all his waies though man be unjust Neither let any who sinne and are on evill courses dreame of impunity but that at one time or other they shall smart for their guiltiness and oftimes when they least suspect danger 19. Amasa is innocent of the crime of seeking Joabs place for which he is murthered by him yet he is guilty before God for his siding with Absolom Whereupon we collect that oftimes men suffer innocently for some crimes that are laid to their charge and in respect of the persons who are their pursuers yet in Gods judgment they are justly punished for other sins wherein either they have been spared or else has not been noted to the world as many at the hour of their death execution publickely have acknowledged With should teach all men to flie sinne though never so secretly committed or by men past by and where impiety is not to expect impunity at one time or other 20. Vers 10. It is said That Amasa took no heed to the sword that was in Joabs hand wherewith he killed him and so foresaw not his danger which shewes that God blinds the eyes of the wisest and benum's their judgments when he is to cut the pillars of their standing and the thred of their lives according to the proverb hos dementat quos Jupiter vult perdere 21. Joab was not punished by David for the like muthering of Abner as he did now of Amasa therefore he committeth this new offence and pollutes the Land with blood again the guiltinesse whereof for this toleration did lie upon the royall throne which should teach all Magistrates to use the sword aright which God hath put in their hands impartially and without respect of persons otherwise what further sinne is committed by their impunity of the former they become guilty thereof and may expect divine punishment for the same 22. After the death of Amasa Joab with Abishai persue after Sheba a traitour to his King while as himself is a traitour to his friend a publicke person imployed by his King in a publicke service in the very execution thereof and who was both innocent expecting no such thing and cousen german with Joab whereby we see how ready some are to censure condemne and punish that in another whereof themselves are guilty as we see Gen. 38. In Judah and that no bands of nature can ty to duties where grace is wanting 23. Vers 12. The people passing by when they saw Amasa lying in the high way killed they stood still Which shewes us that the death of great men draw many eyes upon it and many censures of it whether they be in Church or Commonwealth therefore their life should be so ordered as their death may justly be bemoaned as Samuell was 1 Sam. 25. 1. 24. Joabs man seeing this removes Amasa out of the high way and covers him not regarding so much the losse as the eye-sore of Israell Thus wicked politicians care not so much for the committing of wickednesse as the notice thereof therefore if murthers oppressions thefts whoredomes be smothered and hid from the knowledge of men their Atheist blind and obdured hearts care not for the omniscient knowledge of the Almighty who has power both of soul body to cast into Hell fire whence it is said by the Psalmist The fool hath said in his heart that there is no God 25. Amasa being thus removed out of the way the people follow bloody Joab in persuit of rebellious Sheba Vers 13. Their leader being wicked and evill but the cause which they chiefly followed being good It is to the cause then which we ought to look and not censure the cause or judge thereof by persons or their personall faults who maintain the same but separating the precious from the vile and distinguishing between the one and the other Let us adhear to the cause or to that which is good whether Doctrine forme of government or other and leave the persons for their faults to God and them who has power to punish them 26. Vers 15. Sheba being persued betakes himself to Abell a fenced City as David had said Vers 6. To escape taking which notwithstanding of intended safety did prove his ruin God so disappointing the projects and practises of wicked men that he makes their glory to turn to their shame and turneth their wisdome like Achitophells into folly and that wherein they place their confidence and safety to tend to their destruction O happy then is he who is directed by God who puts his whole confidence onely in him and makes him to be onely his sunne and his shield Psal 84. 11. 27. Vers 16. For preservation of the City onely a wise Woman appears and parlies with Joab Whereby we observe that God useth weak instruments oftimes to effectuate great purposes that the glory may be his own and the good redound to others as we see in Deborah Jaill Judith this wise Woman here and many others and that Gods graces as wisdome and the like are not tyed to any one sex but are free to all on whom
waters even so did the Lord preserve him by delivering him from all these troubles 2. He amplifies this deliverance from the persons and their quality from whom he was delivered towit 1. Positively that they were strong Enemies that hated him this being the ground of their Enmity 2. Comparatively that they were much stronger than he and therefore by his own strength could not be delivered from them but by his who is omnipotent and is stronger than they Next he amplifies his deliverance from the vigilancy and craftinesse of his Enemies whereby they prevented him in the day of his calamity and sought to surprise him before he was awar or could provide sufficiently for his own defence as we see in his own Sonne Absoloms insurrection but the Lord was his stay whereupon he did rely trust And lastly when he was redacted to great straits and knew no outget nor what to doe except that with good Hezekias his eyes were towards the Lord and as he said to Jonathan 1 Sam. 20. 3. When there was but a step between him and death Then the Lord brought him forth as out of a prison and delivered him for no merite of his as the impulsive cause although he was a man according to Gods own heart but because of the Lords free love and that he delighted in him OBSERVATIONS 1. DAvid calleth himself a Servant to the Lord being a great King over men Which should be an example to teach all men and especially those who are in great places the vertue of humility and that the chief point of their office is to serve God and to use their power for him as the same is from him which while any neglect as glorious and proud Tyrants do they become base slaves to Satan and their own beastly appetites 2. From the nature of this song of praise we learn out of the same inscription Psal 18. And first verse of this Chapter Where beside the generall deliverance from all his Enemies he particularizes Saul That as it is the duty of all men to be thankfull to God for all his benefits in generall as we see Psal 103. 2. So likewise in the same Psalme and elsewhere to recount and be thankfull for some of the chiefest which we have receaved in particular 3. From the time of peace and tranquillity wherein David doth this when the Lord had delivered him from the hand of all his Enemies We observe what should be the right use of peace and prosperity towit to expresse our thankfulnesse to God for the same both by word and deed in the course of a Godly conversation and neither to be lulled asleep thereby like Laish in a carnall security nor to pamper our bodies like the rich glutton nor to glory thereof and confide therein with the rich fool in the Gospell 4. We see here likewise that albeit David used the secondary and ordinary means of his deliverance from his Enemies yet he attributes the same onely to God and his blessing of the means without which all had been in vain which he could have used as we see Psal 127. 1. 1 Cor. 3. 6. And elsewhere and therefore in all our enterprises this should be sought and in all our successes this should be acknowledged 5. Vers 2. From Davids amplifying of the Lords goodnesse to him by so many and diverse Epethites which afford comfort and instruction We see that a Godly and sensible soul of the Lords mercies can never sufficiently enlarge it self in the expression of and acknowledgment of the same and when it hath expatiated it self and done all it can it thinks that it is deficient in duty and can never enough magnify the riches of the Lords mercy and glory of his grace and goodnesse 6. From his comparing him to a Rock a Fortresse a Horne and a Tower c. We see that from every thing a Godly man can gather a lesson of comfort or duty as the Bee can gather Hony from every flowre therefore ungrate Israell Isai 1. Is sent to the Ox and Asse to learn and the sluggard to the Bee and Ant and such as are onely Verball Professors to the fruitlesse Figtree that was cursed and the unprofitable servant and hider of the Talent as also wicked livers to the Vineyard spoken of Isa 5. 7. Vers 3. From the conclusion which he makes upon all the former Epethites that therefore in God he will trust We see the use that the Godly make of the Lords by past goodnesse or mercies towards them towit from their bygone experience they resolve still to trust and put their confidence in God for future favours and manifestation of his care and kindnesse towards them as we see in Davids reasoning from the Lyon and Beares overthrow to the like of Goliah 8. Vers 4. Davids next resolution after trusting in God is That he will call upon him still as he had done formerly Which shewes unto us not onely that as we trust in God for his mercy goodnesse so we must seek the same by prayer but also that we must be constant in the exercise of this holy duty praying alwayes as the Apostle exhorts us and upon all occasions amongst all the benefits of God there being none greater then this the moving of our heart to call upon God and pouring upon us the Spirit of grace and supplication and then which we can have no greater assurance of obtaining our requests then when we get a heart to seek the same earnestly at the Lords hands wherefore he subjoynes so shall I be saved from my Enemies 9. In like manner where David sayes he will call upon the Lord who is worthy to be praised We see that prayer is onely to be made to God and neither to Sainct nor Angell for as the Apostle sayes Rom. 10. 14. How shall they call upon him in whom they have not believed That seeing we must onely believe in God therefore sayes our Saviour proving thereby himself to be God Joh. 14. 1. Ye believe in God believe also in me therefore it will follow that we must onely call upon God these two being the Lords prerogatives royall as it were religious prayer and praise as we are taught here as also Psal 50. 15. 10. Vers 5. By the waves of death that compassed David and the floods of wicked men that made him afraid We see that the Godly are not onely vexed with outward Enemies but also exercised sometimes with inward troubles and disquietings as we see Job was Job 16. 12. and 18. 10 11. And David Psal 22. 1 14 15. And therefore none who are so exercised with such inward wrestlings should think the same uncouth or unusuall 11. Where in like manner we see that David sayes That the floods or multitude of wicked men made him afraid We observe that the best of men have their infirmities and their best graces a mixture there with So that although David trusted in the Lord to be saved from all his
sword of Pestilence And O how little pleasure doth the Lord take in the death of sinners ere David could see the destroyer the Lord had restrained him whose compassions if they did not both withhold and abridge his judgments what could we look for but hell and destruction 16. Vers 17. In Davids supplication to God we see his admirable Love to his poore subjects who would ingrosse the plague to himselfe and his house from this people of Israell and sues to interpose himselfe between them and the destroyer Thus did our Saviour Christ and sonne of David who is that good and great shepheard of his sheep offer himselfe to death which they had deserved yea more did dye for them and interposed himselfe between the Fathers wrath and them to deliver them there from and from everlasting destruction and as David did for his people still interced's for his Church to the worlds end 17. We see likewise though David saw the Angell with the destroying sword above Jerusalem yet he supplicates not the Angell but him who is the God of Angells and of heaven and ear●h which shewes us how farre the practice of this holy King and Prophet doth disagree from the practice and doctrine of Romanists who pray to Saints and Angells and so gives that religious worship to the creature which is only due to the Creator as we have shewen before and is so farre from ahe example which we have in the Word of God Revel 22. 9. ●nd that Apostolicall precept Coll. 2. 18. 18. Vers 18. It is said that Gad came to David and said Go reare an Altar to the Lord. And vers 19. It is said that David went up to do so as the Lord had commanded So that David reverenced and obeyed the Word of the Prophet as the Word of God which should serve as a good and imitable example to all people of high and low degree to heare reverence and obey that which is taught out of the Word of God and warranted therefrom by his faithfull Ministers not as the word of man but as the Word of the Lord this being the cause of so small resort to the hearing thereof so little attention thereto or reverence and obedience to the same and consequently of so great loosness of life and abounding in sinne that Gods Word which is preached is not accounted to be Gods Word and that they that heare not the sam● as our Sav●our speakes heare not him 19. This Alter must be reared up in the threshing floore of Arannah the Jebusite which was as we have shewne upon Mount Moriah so that on that very hill where the Angell held the sword of Abraham from killing his sonne Isaac who was a tipe of Christ doth God now with hold the sword of the Angell from killing his people and upon this very ground after did the temple also stand where the holy Altar should be whereon the expiatory and propitiatory sacrifices for Gods people should be offered up in succeeding generations not without a mysterie of that oblation of Christ Jesus as is said prefigured by Isaac and whose blessed body was the true Temple tiped by that of Solomon as Christ himselfe shewes Joh. 2. 19. And his oblation of himselfe is that expiatory and propitiatory sacrifice by which Gods wrath is appeased and we reconciled unto God his Father neither was that also without a mysterie that it was on the floore of a Jebusite prefiguring thereby the calling of the Gentiles 20. Vers 22. David having declared to Arannah the cause of his coming up unto him for buying his threshing floore to reare an Altar to the Lord that the plague might be stayed from the people he meets David in so holy a motion and liberally offers the same freely in gift unto him with his oxen and wooden uteusills for a fire to the b●rnt offering Where we see that a Godly heart will part with any thing that is needfull and may serve for the worship of God who is the giver of all good things which we have here and of all good things which we hope or look and long for hereafter Which serves to rebuke and condemne the tenacious and base avaricious disposition of many in this age who can part with nothing for the maintenance of Gods worship or promoting of religion or any good work 21. Vers 23. Arannah's liberality and princely munificence is therefore highly praised by the spirit of God and registrate to all after ages in the holy Scripture that all these things did Arannah as a King gives to a King and that he said to David the Lord God accept thee Whereupon we observe that what is done by a pious heart to the honour and worship of God shall never want its own reward and blessed remembrance as was the breaking of that box of precious oyntment by Mary Magdalen upon Christs head and as here is the remembrance and registrating both of Arannahs liberality and power whereas on the contrary the remembrance and name of the wicked shall rot and either be buried in oblivion or else like the parcells of traitours and malefactours bodies that are executed and fixt up in publick places remaine to posterity as a badge of eternall infamy 22. Vers 24. Since it was for God and to David Arannah would give but seeing it was for God and offering sacrifice which should be of his own substance David will not take O laudable and pious contention into which would God or in like all contentions amongst Christians were resolved David therefore who knew that it was more blessed to give than receive therefore would not receive from Arannah what he offered in gift but as Abraham delt in like manner with the sonnes of Heth Gen. 23. He would buy it of him as he did for 50. shekells of silver and built there an Altar unto the Lord and offered thereon burnt offerings and peace offerings and so the Lord was intreated for the Land and the plague ceased To which God Father Sonne and Holy Ghost invisible and indivisible be all honour praise and glory for ever more Amen FINIS Ioshua 7. 1 Sam. 4. * The Hebren word is Shabatz c. See Exod. 28. 4. 11. 13. 1 Sam. 30. 2 Chr. 20. 12. 1 King 13. Iudg. 9. 1 King 16. 1 Sam. 15. 35. John 10. Act. 8. Math 5. 35 s 27. 52. Job 30. 9 10. c. Rev 11. 10. Revel 18. 2 King 13. 2 Tim. 3. Gen. 31. Joshua 21. and 14. Gen. 32. Gen. 34. Jerem. 42. 5. 43. 2. 1 King 2. 34 35. Matth. 5. Deut. 20. Judg. 20. 2 Sam. 20. 2. Chro. 32. Josh 5. Eccles 9. 11. Iudg. 21. 2 3 6. Prov. 16. 9. 1. King 20. 11. 1 King 21. 20. 1 King 22. 17. Math. 8. 9. Prov. 16. 6. Genes 4. 19. 2 Chron. 20. Revel 16. 19. Revel 18. 1 Sam. 23. 27. 2 King 19. Act. 23. 7. Judg. 14. Judg. 9. 23. 1 King 13. 1 King 18. Job 31. 35. * Hic murus aheneus esto nil conscire sibi nulla pallescere culpa Genes 38. 1 King 14. 2 Chron. 16. Act. 27. Deut. 6. 16. Math. 4. Exod. 10. Act. 16. Prov. 9. 17 18 Prov. 20. 25. ●●ov 12. 3. Prov. 11. 4. Esther 6. 7. Numb 24. 10. Prov. 16. 7. Exod. 34. 16. 1 King 20 2 Chron. 18. 1 King 11. 2 King 20. Gen. 21. Gen. 14. Iosh 8. Job 31. 4. 23. Gen. 31. 53. Gen. 20. 34. Gen. 50. 19. Exod. 5. 2. 1 Sam. 15. 1 Sam. 2. 32. Judg. 8. 27. Genes 22. 15. Numb 25. 13. See 1 King 15. 4. Iudg. 1. 7. Gen. 38. See 2 King 9. 31. 2 Chron. 15. 13. 2 King 23. 21. 2 Chron. 30. 1. Matth. 22. Iob 31. 29. Prov. 24. 17. Prov. 25. 21. 2 Chr. 19. 6. Dat veniam coruis vexat censura columbas Judg. 16. Dan. ● Exod. 8. Gen. 49. 23. Psal 103. Rom. 15. 5. Rom. 3. 4. Rom. 8. 31. b. 1. 14. Job 10. 4. Job 14. 1. and 14. (a) Note also that Davids sentence vers 5. threatning death is the voyce of the Law but Nathans words vers 13. Promising life to penitents is the voyce of the Gospel 2 Sam. 5. 4. 1 Chron. 22 5.
THE THRONE OF DAVID OR AN EXPOSITION OF THE Second of Samuell WHEREIN IS SET DOWNE THE Pattern of a Pious and Prudent Prince and a clear Type of of the Prince of Princes CHRIST IESVS the Sonne of DAVID and his Spirituall Kingdome By WILLIAM GUILD D. D. and Minister of Gods word at King Edward in Scotland OXFORD Printed by W. HALL for ROB. BLAGRAVE Anno Salutis 1659. A Letter written in order to the now mentioned Society or little Common-wealth By some well affected persons whose hearts and hands have already joyned therein to stir up all such who are truely sensible of the poor and needy to carry on this so necessary and charitable a work HAving not only considered the poverty afflictions and streights of many well minded people Together with the evil consequences that arise from the corrupt customs and waies of most employments and the general disorder proceeding from riches and poverty But also the way propounded by the endeavours of our friend Peter Cornelius to rectifie all such and many other inconveniences by bringing together a fit suitable and well qualified people into one Houshold government or little Common-wealth wherein every one may keep his propriety and be employed in some work or other as he shall be fit without being oppressed as is more at large expressed in a Platform to that purpose Whereupon we are resolved judgeing it to be necessary and our duty to promote so good and pious a work with the assistance of other mercifull and rational men to lay such a foundation as may tend to the relief of the oppressed the preserving of such as are in danger of falling into snares and the increase of understanding and mutuall love as also the exemplary ordering of such acts as may be accomplished by prudential charity And hereunto we do earnestly invite all Persons that have a willing mind to do good according to their abilities some by their Wisdom and Councell others by money and credit or by both as they shall be able and free that so a stock may be raised for the carrying on of this good and beneficial work To which end we have subscribed our names and the summs of money which we are willing to give Hoping that all such as are for so general a work will upon due consideration likewise subscribe for such a summe of money as they are willing to give towards the accomplishment of the Premisses and meet together to confer and order the said summes of moneys into the hands of some trusty Persons for the use and benefit of the Society only and what else shall be found conducing to the perfecting of this work till the Society can subsist of it self in order which we believe may soon be from the credible information of divers persons relating that many hundreds in Transilvania Hungaria and the Paltsgraves Countrey from a small beginning have attained not only to a very comfortable life among themselves but also ability of doing much good to others not of their Society subscribed towards the raysing of a Stock I. S. 100 l. W. R. 100 l. To the Reader Christian Reader THe ensuing Commentary was about a year since sent unto me out of Scotland it was intended by the Authour to have been published with a Preface or Dedication to my self Being a stranger unto me some mistaken apprehensions of me which may easily happen at such a distance it seems put him on that resolution after the finishing of the whole work and prefixing the Epistle mentioned unto it with his own hand the Authour himself dying his Relict sent the Book and Epistle with a Letter of her own fignifying the commands of her dying Husband to that purpose unto me both his Epistle and her Letter as expressing many things concerning me which I dare not own or arrogate to my selfe much lesse be a means of publishing them to the world I thought meet to suppresse But for the Treatise it self finding it written with perspicuity and clearnesse handling a subject of great and delightful variety with a choice mixture of spirituall morall and politicall observations tempered by a good and sound judgment unto common capacities and not knowing but that the onely copy of it was in my hand that publick good might not by the learned Author's respect to me be hindred I thought meet to further the publication of it which being offered I make bold to recommend it to the Christian Reader as I do him also in the perusall of it to the grace of him who is able to make it usefull John Owen THE THRONE of David Or An exposition of the second book of Samuel Wherein is set down the pattern of a pious and prudent prince and a cleare type of the prince of princes Christ Jesus the sonne of David and of his spirituall Kingdome THE PREFACE TO omit any generall or prolix discourse concerning the utility and delectation of historie and in speciall of these registred in Holy Scripture and to come in particular to this present History contained in this second of Samuel In it we have the pattern of a pious and prudent prince and in the estate of the Kingdome of Israel under David we have typified the estate of the Church militant under Christ Jesus But before we come to the particular explication of this Book we will speak 1. Of the Author and penman thereof 2. Of the inscription and reason thereof 3. Of the Subject and matter thereof and 4. The utility and profit thereof First then there is no doubt of the Author but as is said of the whole Scripture in generall so of this in particular that the same is by divine inspiration and that the spirit of God is the Author and indyter thereof But as for the penman some suppose that the same was written by the Prophets Gad and Nathan who lived in the reign of David Others that Samuel from whom it hath the denomination was the writer of it till the 25. chapter where his death is recorded and the rest supplied by some of the forenamed Prophets But the most probable is thought to be that it was the office of the high-priest to register the History of the Jewish church and what fell out every one in his own time But herein seeing Scripture is silent we need not curiously inquire further hereof 2. Concerning the title and inscription The Hebrews give this reason thereof because they containe the whole course of the life of Samuel and of these two Kings Saul and David whom he according to Gods ordinance anointed But the Greeks as the 70. or septuagint whom Jerome and most part of the Latines do follow rejecting the inscription of these two bookes from Samuel they call these two the first and second book of the Kings because of the life and acts of the Kings that are set down therein to wit Saul and David as in the other two bookes that followes the lives and acts of the rest of the Kings of
Judah and Israel are set down therein 3. As for the argument or matter contained in this second book of Samuel the same is the whole History of the estate of the Church of God of their Kings and Commonweale from the death of Saul to the decrepit age of David which is the space of 40 yeares wherein is declared the noble acts of David his entrie to the kingdome and how he inlarged the same also what troubles he had both intestine and forraine from all which at last the Lord did deliver him and gave him victory over all his enemies and how in the end in peace and rest he finished his daies 4. The utility and profit which this History affords is manifold which may be reduced to two heads the first for confirmation of Faith the second for example of Life which Paul joyneth 2. Tim 3. 10. The first appeareth in the verifying of the promise made by Samuel to David in the Lords name that he should be King after Saul albeit for the triall of his faith after many great sufferings and desperate like dangers the same came to pass and he all this while did relye on the Lords promise The second appeares in the prudence piety zeale humility equity and good government of David and all other his heroick and godly virtues worthy of imitation As also is set down David's infirmities and fall's as examples of the weakness of the best when they watch not over themselves or are left to themselves proponed to be eschewed ut majorum ruina sit minorum cautela as likewise his repentance to be imitated and the sharp corrections notwithstanding as medicinall corrasves wherewith he was chastised as we see in the Lords dealing with his dearest sonnes and servants Heb 12. 6 7. And therefore what sharper punishments may the impenitent and Satans slaves expect In this History likewise of David's reign and kingdome we have typified Christ Jesus the Sonne of David his condition and estate of his Church to the end of the world for 1. As David was anointed to be king over Israel so was Christ anointed to be King over his Church 2. But as David endured many troubles persecutions and sufferings before he entred into his kingdome so did Jesus Christ here on earth before he entred in his 3. After his entry he was mightily opposed and oppugned by them of Saul's house his enemie by armes force and violence and so was Christ Jesus and his Church and Gospell by the bloody persecution of the heathens Roman Emperors 4. Notwithstanding Davids house waxed still strong and Sauls house weake so the Christian Church and profession did the more flourish and heathenish idolatry and heresies decay 5. Hiram also a Gentile and King of Tyrus joyned in Amity with David and contributed to the building of his house in Sion both furniture and workmen typifying thereby how the gentiles should come into the profession of the Gospell and should contribute to the building of the Church of Christ as mysticall members thereof 6. Then doth David bring home the Arke of God and set it in his house at Sion and then in like manner was the true worship of God established in his Church which is the true Sion 7. But hereafter did Absolon craftily under a faire pretence of the good of Israel rise against David and stole away the hearts of Davids people who joyned themselves with him in rebellion many following him in the simplicity of their hearts and being deceived by his simulat and faire pretence of piety even so did Antichrist arise against Christ under a like faire pretence to be for him and therefore is said to be horned like the lamb though speaking like the dragon and who fraudulently stole away the hearts of Gods people who in like manner except a few like those who followed David followed him in the simplicity of their hearts till the time of evocation out of Babel Revel 18. 2. And that as David was thereafter brought back to Jerusalem by his people so that the truth of the Gospell and professors thereof was brought back in like manner which seemed before to be exiled as David and his followers were and driven like him and the church Revel 12. 14. Into the wilderness and desert But as Absolon was at last overthrown and Davids kingdome under him was thereafter peaceably established so shall Antichrist according to that prediction Revel 18. And the Church of Christ shall thereafter injoy peace and quietness II. SAM Chap. 1. to the 17. Verse THe principall argument of this chapter is the report of the event of the battle between the Israelites and Philistines under Saul upon mount Gilboa which generally comprehends these two particulars 1. The report it selfe from the first verse to the 17. The second is what fell out thereon from the 17. verse even to the end In the report we have to consider 1. The matter and circumstance thereof 2. The triall and how it was accepted And 3. the just reward of the reporter and actor therein 1. The matter reported is the losse of the battle on Israels side and death of Saul and Jonathan The first circumstance set down in the report is of the time to have been the third day after Davids victory against the Amalikites wherein the swiftness of the fame of the battle on Gilboa is to be noted seeing in less then the space of three daies It is divulged from Gilboa which is situated in the territory of Isachar at the border of Jordan in the east march of Canaan to David in the land of the Philistines dwelling then at Ziklag situate neer to the mediterranean upon the West-point of Canaan esteemed to have been each part distant from the other the bounds of a hundred miles or thereabout in the latitude of the land Next the person reporter is called herein generall one and there after in speciall an Amalekite probably the Son of one of that Nation whom Saul had formerly unlawfully spared in his expedition against Agag and therefore God had reserved him now to be his murtherer 2. His carriage or behaviour is very crafty and cunning he covereth his head with ashes he rents his garments and doth most humble curtesy to David as to his King This gesture of his was used ever by such who were displeased for the publick calamity of the Lords People as may be seen in the example of Joshua and of the messinger that came to report the event of the battle to Heli. But as they used this forme uprightly so doth this Amalekite use the same Hypocritically 3. His Oration testifies his further Hypocrisy which he useth very elaboratly and artificially by degrees beginning at the generall and coming to the particulars ascending from that which was most grievious and ending with that which he thought unto David should be most acceptable and good news in this manner the People are fled and many of them overthrown also Saul and Jonathan his
Son are dead so that both the King thy persecutour and Enemy and Jonathan though thy friend yet apparent Heir between thee and the Kingdome are both out of the way and therefore this last news may asswage the grief of the former the slaughter to wit of thy Countrymen and People a crafty flatterer indeed The King also as a prudent Prince not facile to credit rumours inquires once and again the certainty he answers that he speaks as an ejewitnesse that which he saw and he affirmes the thing which he asked and to seal up the truth of his speechs he makes a reall exhibition of the royall ornaments of the crown and bracelet whereby he concludes with himself liberally to be rewarded of David Concerning the matter of his report and verity thereof there are divers opinions amongst the learned some thinking it a manifest lie made to gain favour thanks and reward in respect that it seems directly contradictory to the verity of the forme of Sauls death 1 Sam. 31. and 1 Chron. 10. Others as sundry of the Rabbins and Josephus holdes the opinion that he spake truly granting as is said in the forenamed places that Saul runne himself upon his owne sword and of that wound especially he dyed and that the Archers had formerly hit him and wounded him likewise but that immediatly not dyeing of these wounds especially by this last given by himself not entring so deep into his body as he speaks himself nam detinuit mè haec ocellata chlamys v. 9. And life being as yet within him as he also in the same verse testifies therefore he desires this Amalekite to stand upon him as being formerly fallen and to kill him outright which he performs and thereby altogether is made to give up the ghost After that David hath tryed and found it to be of truth that Saul and Jonathan are dead with great heavinesse and regret doth he receive this news and with great mourning and fasting he bewails Saul Jonathan and the People which mourning is upon two respects the one naturall the other godly and spirituall this first was the sorrow 1. for the King his Father in Law and Lord 2. for Jonathan his faithfull friend prevented by immaturity of violent death before he could get occasion of acquitting his former favours and 3. for his People his dearest kinsmen and of one country with him The spirituall is the apprehension of Gods wrath thus punishing Church and Commonwealth for sin and making his People to fall so before their Enemies whereby the honour of the name of God would be reproached and blasphemed amongst the heathen The reward of this messenger is death by orderly processe first David accuses how durst thou put thy hand on the Lords anointed Next he convicts him by his own confession which uncoactedly given and not enforced by torture is by all Laws holden pro confesso then he condemneth and commandeth execution upon good reasons the crime was capitall the party confessed David was a Judge in Siklag and the title by the death of Saul is increased to the Kingdome OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 1. BEfore David had newly gotten a notable Victory over his Enemies the Amalekites and recovered the prey of Ziklag and now the Lord takes Saul his persecutor also out of the way and makes the news thereof speedily to be brought unto him by whose death he is promoted unto the Kingdome so that the Lord heaps good things upon his chosen and renewes his benefits to the godly who rely upon him and in patience possesseth there souls witnesse Jacob and a cloud of others that may be brought out of Scripture 2. That Victory over the Amalekites was not without a preceding heavy disaster and this news containes likewise a sad theame Jonathan his trusty friend and the Lords People his dear Countrymen over whom he was to reigne was likewise overthrown with Saul in battle thus temper 's the Lord the Cup that he gives his owne comfort with the crosse and the mixture of some tartnesse with his sweetest morsels least they should overcloy us or we too much delight in them therefore with extraordinary Revelations Paul must have some buffetings of Satan least he should be puft up above measure and least we should put our felicity in them here or not thankfully with Job be content when he takes them back from us again our sweetest roses must have there sharp prickels 3. God stirreth up an Amalekite vers 8. an infidell in Religion an adversary to Israel and particular Enemy to David to become his favourer and with all diligence to carry this message whereupon we collect the generall that when the Church of God or any members thereof hath been in greatest adversities amongst forrain Enemies then God hath moved the hearts of there very adversaries to be there best friends Examples Abraham with Abimelech the Patriarches with the first Pharoah Moses preserved by the Daughter and brought up in the court David with the King of Gath and Moab of the Prophets of God in Achabs time fed by the governours of his house Obadiah Daniel the 3. Children Ezra Nehemiah Ester Mordecai and sundry others Then let us not fear the losse or want of friends the Lord who framed the heart hath the hearts of Kings and private men in his hands which he will turne as he did the heart of Esau in an instant to the comfort of such as depend with David upon his protection and providence 4. Vers 2. This messinger is a pattern of a cunning Hypocrite crafty flatterer brought up in the Atheist Schools of prophane courts temporizing in Religion and in matters of state composing his ingenie gesture manners and speech to the perfiting of that altogether which he thought should please the Prince upon the respect of his own advantage without all care of conscience Such an intelligencer was Doeg unto Saul such are may courtiers about Princes and great men now adayes few Mordecaies Nehemiah's or Daniels being promoted or few Ebed-melech's or Obadiah's to be found in courts 5. In his first report of the fall of Prince and People in Battle we see what is the miserable estate of a People under a wicked King oftimes they imitate his example as is said Regis ad exemplum c. and are punished with him yea he is punished in the person's and body of his subjects witnesse 70000 of Israel falling by Pestilence for the presumption of Davids numbring of the people and there Saul for going to the witch of Endor not onely dyeth himself alone but the people of the Lord are overthrown with him on the contrary O happy people that hath a godly Prince 6. Vers 10. Saul dyeth by the edge of the sword even by that same death which he had intended against David and yet David is alive thus is it verified that the wicked dig a pit for the godly but they themselves shall fall therein and the souls of the Lords chosen shall
discipline militarie together with the record of the Lords battles as mention is made likewise thereof Joshua 10. 13. Which book with diverse others that were composed by Salomon were burned in the first destruction of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans and so the whole Bibliothek hebraick fell not into the hands of Esdras In the third period we have the generall pathetick proposition of this lamentation proponed by poeticall figures of Apostrophe turning his speech to God and the people in a verse interrogative which the Greek poets call Amoebeus by fiction of persons which we call Prosopopeia and by a description of the calamity which is called Periphrasis The verse is O honour of Israel in thy high places how are the mighty slaine and overthrowne by interpretation O God who art the honour of Israel and O Israel that had the honour to have so many mighty men how miserable is thy calamity by the which thy God is dishonoured and thou art spoiled of so many honourable and strong men the cause of all this doubtless is thy manifold sinnes For we must understand that the scope of this oration is to bring Israel to understand that this calamity proceeds from sinne and can not cease but by unfained repentance In the 20. and 21. verses which is the fourth and fift periods he amplifies this calamity by the events the first in the twenty verse containing a deprecation proponed by Enallage of the Imperative mood for the Optative after the manner of poets Tell it not in Gath nor publish it in the streets of Ashkelon by which as the capitall Cities he meanes the whole land the reason assigned is lest the daughters of the uncircumcised Philistims rejoice and in praising their Idol gods dispraise the name of the true God of Israel and so the end of this deprecation is the glory of God which he doth tender But how doth he will here a thing which is impossible in saying tell it not or let it not be told It is answered this comes from a perturbed mind wherein falls no certain deliberation and to testify his care of the glory of God is spoken not as assured of performance but optative and as he would wish it By Daughters some meanes the little townes of Palestina but the common opinion and literall sense is more simple and better and confirmed by the custome used after victories in those daies both amongst the faithfull 1 Sam 18. 5. c. And amongst the infidels Judg 16. 23. By the Philistims rejoycing over Sampson The second period of amplification of this calamity containeth vers 21. An imprecation against Gilboa by the figure of Prosopopeia and Apostrophe cursing that place wherein that misery befell to Israel with drougth and barrenness to remaine so as monuments of that calamity In the five verses following is the speciall lamentation for Saul and Jonathan taken 1. From their couragious acts against Gods enemies and happy victorious success 2. From their mutuall love and lot to dye together 3. From their provident diligence and undaunted courage in prosecuting the affaires 4. From the effects of the government that thereby they enriched their subjects 5. From his private interest and dammage received by the loss of Jonathan with whom he had such conjunction that he compares his love which he did beare to Jonathan to the love of brothers and preferreth Jonathans love towards him to the vehement love of women which they can or do beare to Husbands Children or any others whereunto he subjoynes the conclusion by way of interrogation called Amoebeus O Israel againe I must say how great is thy calamity whereby thy God is so dishonoured and thou spoiled of men of such qualities surely sinne hath thus provoked God to deale with thee therefore timely and truely reconcile to him least he altogether consume thee where as we saw upright justice before so here is true piety O happy beginnings therefore of a happy King OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 17. WE see here by the example of David and practice of the primitive Church that the use of funerall orations amongst Christians is indifferent and lawfull if without flattery partiall affection and ostentation they be made to the glory of God encouragement and example of virtue and godliness stirring up to the consideration of our mortality and duty of repentance and for confirmation of the doctrine of the resurrection all tending to the instruction of the living and not to the superfluous or unjust praise of the dead 2. Here is a most Godly and imitable example in David who mourneth not only for the death of Jonathan his friend but likewise for Saul his foe and adversary whereby we see that the rule of godly or Christian love extends not only to thy friends natuturall or civill but to all men albeit in the first place to the family of Faith yea to thy very enemies as is confirmed by Christ in the disputation he had with the corrupted Pharisees Math 5. 44. The chiefe cause hereof is the honour of God which we ought to tender and the enlargement of his kingdome which by the fall of men in defection is hindred Gods truth slandered and the Lord stirred up in wrath for to punish but on the contrary by their conversion God is glorified the kingdome of Christ so farre amplified and the Church comforted But what shall we say of the unnaturall world now and the manners of men who would be called Christians in this latter age who not only attaines to the Christian perfection but on the contrary proponing their particular passions to Gods glory are not only rejoyced at the calamities of men their adversaries but also are void of naturall affection to parents and friends and are so full of envy and ungodly emulations that they are sorry for the good same and estimation of their very brethren these are they of whom the Apostle speaks 2 Tim 3. 3. Let us learne then to be compassionate with the calamities of all men for Gods cause following the example of the godly herein and that Apostolicall precept 2 Pet 3. 8. But especially mourning for the affliction of Joseph Amos 6. 6. 3. Vers 18. David teaching Israel to learne the exercise of the bow gives the argument of the right use of armes as lawfull to invade or defend in lawfull waies against the erronious opinion of the Anabaptists and agreeing with the chiefe part of a Kings office to whom is said to be given the sword by which is understood the Jurisdiction and power and the execution thereof at home and abroad as just cause requires Examples of Abraham Moses Joshua the Judges Samuel David and constant practice received in Israel by divine command warranting the same Let no man doubt therefore in lawfull causes to follow the Supreame Magistrate and lawfull Authority in just persuit or defence where they are required 4. Vers 19. The honour of every Nation consists in these two God and valiant men or true religion and
will come and not delay mercy and truth shall kisse one another and one jot of his word shall not faile let that performance of the promises made unto Abraham concerning his seed Josephs preferment Israels deliverance and many others be witnesses hereof 15. In all the foresaid things we have the kingdome of Christ represented for as by Sauls tyranny David was persecuted so was Christ and his Church yet as Saul was overthrowne and an entry made to David so were the Churches persecutors taken out of the way and she began to be advanced as David did not his own will but followed Gods so Christ wrought not his own will but his fathers as David ascended to Hebron so hath Christ to heaven as David carried thither with him his wives and servants so hath Christ made his Church and servants participate of all his benefits and doth daily bring them to that same place to which he hath gone before them as David was received only by Judah but rejected by the greatest part so is Christ and his kingdome as Davids kingdome is not accomplished at one time so neither Christs as it had ist own competitours so hath Christs but as the kingdome of Ishboseth is short and declining but Davids longer and flourishing so is it between Christ and Satans kingdome and as David was often times anointed by Samuel by Judah and at last by Israel so was Christ which Paul reduceth to three the Spirit of power sanctification and first resurrection 16. Vers 5. Concerning the report made of the men of Jabesh Gilead unto David concerning their burying of Saul after whose body probably he had caused to inquire as is aforesaid others are of opinion that it was to inflame him against them others that he should beware of them seeing they were professed favourers of Saul or reconciled with them but David layeth all sinistrous opinions and suspitions of them aside charitably construing their fact and for their fidelity and kindness to their Lord he honours them with an embassage congratulatory and a promise of his favour and assistance whereby we are taught not to give eare and credit to detraction but being slow to misconceive of mens actions rather charitably to make the best construction of them till more manifest experience prove them otherwise thus greatly shall we disappoint Satan that ill seed sower stop dissention maintaine unity approve our selves to God and readily winne our neighbour 17. In the men of Jabesh we see the loyall and sinceer love of subjects to their prince obeying him being alive and honouring him being dead which fact as pleasing to God and approved by man is registred in Scripture like Mary Magdalens anointing of Christ to be recorded for ever for the memoriall of the just shall flourish that the name of the wicked shall be put out either with the silence of oblivion or else the black dash of the record of their foule deeds innumerable examples hereof may be collected in holy writ where they are recorded 18. Vers 6. That which David wisheth to them from God is mercy and truth in the assured performance but that which he himselfe promiseth is reward the one is free the other of debt no merit then will he ascribe unto them at Gods hands but will yeeld the same at his own in regard by his princely office he was bound to cherish the good as well as to chastise the bad and not to suffer such kind loyalty to his Father-in-law and predecessour which they with such care and hazard of their lives had shewne to be misknowne uncommended and rewarded as being assured that they who were loyall to one would be so to another Let this therefore informe aright the minds of all men how to esteeme of their own actions in all holy and humble sobriety never urging merit upon God howsoever we deserve at the hands of man but suiting free mercy and with Jacob professing our selves unworthy of the least of his mercies being but unprofitable servants and our goods deeds wherein as in the way to the kingdome ever we should walke extending no waies to him but to the Saints on earth as the Psalmist sayeth Psalm 16. 2. And availing our own soules but not God as we likewise see Job 22. 2. and 31. 7. 19. We have also in David here the patterne of a good King and loving who as he was carefull before to execute justice upon the Amalekite for his wicked fact so is he diligent here to practise kindness to the men of Jabesh for their godly deed thus ought all Magistrates who are the Lords deputies and gods on earth cherish virtue and chastise vice that so the one may grow and the other may be repressed being as an awfull Lyon to the one and a mild Lamb to the other rewarding the vertuous and godly and punishing the vicious and wicked so shall their throne be established their Crowne glister and their Scepter flourish In the Church let Abiathar therefore be cast out and Zadok set in his roome and let Joab suffer for his fault and Benajah in the policy be surrogat in his place 20. In respect that he promiseth unto them protection and therefore exhorteth them not to be discouraged by the Philistines late victory or Sauls death seeing God had raised him up and he was anointed King we see not only the duty of a lawfull prince which is to maintaine and defend his subjects but likewise that the Lord suffers never his own to be altogether destitute of comfort for if he humble with the one hand he will raise with the other and if he take one benefit from us he will give us another in the place thereof yea perhaps a greater as he did here David for Saul or as he restored holy Job if with thankfulness patience and constancy we depend upon him 21. Vers 8. In the election and anointing of Ishboseth who was made King by Abner we see no consulting of God against whose ordinance and express notified will confessed c. 3. 18. they were going an indirect course therefore they knew either with Saul they would get no answer or else contrary to their intended proceedings thus against God conscience and right they rebelliously prosecute that course which turned thereafter to their own ruine like many now adaies who if they may attaine to a pretended right and possession by policy and power to defraud the right owners and withhold their due from them whether it be holy things seperate from the common use or mans good and prophane they will never consult Gods Word nor conscience how lawfully they attained or detaine the same yea although the oracle of the one and prick of the other most evidently contradict and convince them yet Achan will take the execrable thing and Ahab will have Naboths vineyard though they should make sure with it Gods curse and heavy judgments unto themselves and theirs II SAM Chap 2. from the 12. verse to the 17. THe election
as the Prophet saith they conquer shame and destruction to themselves as the Psalmist likewise found by experience I looked after the ungodly and he was not but the just inherit the earth 3. Vers 14. The cruell and barbarous nature of the wicked is seen in Abner delighting to feed his eies with bloodshed and slaughter and counting no more of it but as a game whereas the Godly man regardeth the life of his beast but the very mercies of the wicked are cruell this nature they participate of their severall masters the Godly who are called the meek of the earth of that meek Lamb Jesus and the wicked the gyants of the earth of that roaring Lyon Satan who ever goeth about seeking whom he may destroy and hath been a manslayer from the beginning 4. Vers. 16. The sad and unfortunate event of this singular combat all of them on both sides being slain proveth the unlawfulnesse of such practises whether they obtrude the triall of a title or right that otherwise cannot be decided for a warrant or a meanes to stay further effusion of blood neither of which is here effectuate for albeit Davids title be undoubtedly good yet all of his men here doe fall as oftimes in Monomachies it happeneth the innocent to receive the foil not that hereby we should accuse God for n●t regarding innocence but justly so that he punisheth presumption and will not be holden to blesse with good successe unlawfull practises without and against a warrant of his approbation not staying for his time of clearing what is in doubt but thrusting ourselves into his room and as for the battle it joyneth hereupon presently so that it was rather a spurre than a bridle to further effusion of blood than hinder the same 5. In Ioab yeilding to Abner and in the young men obtempering them both Ioabs losse of such valiant twelve Champions their losse of themselves teaches what it is to obey an unlawfull challenge and ungodly command rashly ad aras then let our obedience be to superiours and ever Marshall God aright giving him the first place to obey rather him than man in election and him before man in Location and with holy wisdome and Christian care of others of whose life or welfare we ought not to be prodigall laying aside pride foolish temerity and lavish carelesnesse of the estate of them whom we may command and to behave and impale our selves in offer or acceptation within the Limites of the Lords command 6. In denominating the place the field of the strong men Helkathhazairim to wit where they were slain we see that inconsiderately oftimes without any such intention of the Authours by the providence of God monuments of the memory of things are erected whereby God will not only have good things to keep record but the facts of turpitude for their further detestation to have there own remembring thus was the field which was bought with the price of our saviour named Aceldama that proud towre of Nimrod called Babel the place where Israel murmured for wa tearmed Meribah with sundry the like examples seeing therefore post fata facta after death deeds have their own remaining by record remembrance let us be carefull that they be such as rather may be blazed with happy fame then blotted with haplesse infamie and seeing this place is so called to testify the enormity of the fact let us fight that good fight onely whereof the Apostle speakes which is between the flesh and the Spirit which onely hath the profitable end the glorious theater the godly armour and the blessed reward of assured triumph II. SAM Chap. 2. from the 17. verse to the 26. COncerning the ensueing battle we have to resolve whether warres are Lawfull or unlawfull we answer that publick warres undertaken by publick authority are Lawfull as that answer of the Baptists to the souldiers Christs direction to give Caesar that which was Caesars the commendation of the centurion the Laws of warfare set down by God himself to the Israelites the practise of their godliest Patriarches Judges and Kings the title of God himself the Lord of hosts that which is said 1 Sam. 25. 28. And the Apostolick Canon of the Magistrates sword all do testify providing they have these four causes and caveats the matter be punishment of vice the forme right proceeding the efficient Lawfull authority and the end that peace and piety may be obtained The Anabaptists hold the contrary because it is forbidden say they to revenge or resist evil and it is against Christian patience recommended by Christ and his Apostles as also against the nature of Christs Kingdome Isa 2. 4. Micah 4. 2. To all this it is answered that private revenge is onely forbidden and in that place of the Prophets he speaketh not against publick Lawfull warres but sheweth how the hearts of the godly shall be affected one to another albeit of divers nations which peace and love shall begin and grow here but be perfected hereafter And in some sort too even private warres in defense or resistance are Lawfull when by circumstances the Magistrates help cannot be implored for protection in which case as one of the ancients affirmeth the Magistrate seemeth quietly to consent to the deed and which is called inculpata tutela OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 17. A sore battle ensueth on this former combat whereby we see that of smal-provocations and infortunate beginnings great troubles oftimes arise witnesse the abuse of the Levites wife and the Benjamites froward answer the event which was the occasion of the pitifull overthrow of that whole tribe which might at first if the like practise as that of the men of Abel had been followed been wisely prevented 2. The servants of Abner fall before the servants of David so that a right and just cause may ever ordinarily look for Victory being prosecuted aright for as Hezekiah said concerning the King of Ashur there are more with us then with him for with him is the arme of flesh but with us is the Lord our God to help us even so that same protecting presence albeit the eye of the body like Gehezies while it was opened cannot perceive the same doth still attend and give a happy successe to all upright affaires so that if God be with us who can be against us and if that captain of the Lords hoste that appeared unto Joshua stand armed on our side we need not doubt of Victory ordinarily in any just cause and quarrel between us and any adversary whosoever witnesse Abraham against the 5. Kings Israels deliverance from Pharaoh their battles under Moses Joshua and their Judges David against Goliath and here against Abner with sundry others 3. Yet Abner here hath the greater forces eleven tribes against one The arme of man therefore is vain to trust unto neither is the race to the swift nor the battle to the strong but the Victory is of the Lord who will have the glory of
things unto himself and will impart the same to none other therefore albeit Midian be scattered like Grashoppers on the field yet a barly cake shall overturne their tents and Gidion with a few having Trumpets and Lamps in earthen Pitchers shall suddenly make them agast Let Joshua then trust in the Lord and with compassing onely Jericho he shall enter the City whereas Pharaoh trusting in his chariots or Rabshaketh boasting of his invinceable Armado shall perish or returne with shame to his own place 4. Vers 19. The confidence that Abner had in his experience and strength and that Asahel had in his swiftnes and agility being said by a hyperbolicall kind of speech to have been as swift as a roe as Saul aud Ionathan are said to been swifter then Eagles Chap. 1. 23. a●ailes them nothing now but rather turns to their ruine So that those things wherein above others men have gotten a preferment being abused God turneth them to their confusion examples Goliah Sampson Saul Achitophel Haman Absolom Iudas and others such as Arrius confiding in his subtility Milo in his strength Cicero in his eloquence Pompey in his greatnes and Iulius Caesar in his courage as we desire to get therefore gifts or benefits outwards or inward from God let us likewise desire the right use of them that we abuse not the talent that he giveth us else our blessings shall be turned to curses and at last to our own destruction 5. Vers. 22. In Abners dehortation to Asahel containing a direction to meddle with any other souldier of the host rather than him least otherwise he repent and a reason of eschewing further irritation of his Brother Ioab whereby he shewes his unwillingnesse to kill him We see as it is a good thing in him to be slow in revenge or loath to shed blood so first that it is a very evill thing to be so carelesse of those that followed him in making so small account of their lives or spoil Secondly that he should have more thought of this How he should hold up his face before Ioab if he killed Asahel then how he should hold up his face before God at the last day thus the fool hath said in his heart there is no God or with Pharaoh presumptuously inquiring Who is God that I should regard him therefore oftimes the fear of man restrains more the wicked then the terrour of God is a lore unto them this was Esaus fear Gen. 27. 41. But let the godly be contrarily minded 6. Vers 23. In Asahels death who was so eager and wilfull in persuit we see that it is good to use Victory with mediocrity and not with too great cruelty and eager persuit of the yeelding and intreating adversary by making their minds desperate and to reinanimate them as it were with new courage to assault and seeing no courtesy to be had to hazard that altogether which otherwise they cannot save Therefore it was the wise Counsel of that elder Scipio non solum praeparanda sed etiam viae munienda Hosti fugienti 7. Ioab getteth the Victory but not without the death of Asahel his Brother with others 19. So that in all civil warres the very triumphs are lamentable and their Victories not without miserable scarres witnesse Israels lamentation for the destruction of their Brethren the Benjamites and Davids losse and lamenting of Absalom with sundry others II. SAM Chap. 2. from the 26. Verse to the end THe retraite is caused by four reasons 1. Gods providence gathering the clouds and night whereby he declared that it was not he will that more blood should be shed otherwise he might have protracted the day as he did to Joshua 2. The stay and gazing of the people at the body and death of Asahel which greatly moved them the 3. was the recollection of Abners forces on the hill taking so the opportunity and advantage of the place 4. the speech of Abner to Ioab taken from three places 1. Shall the sword devoure for ever The meaning whereof is of things that are not good in themselves but for the respect of another and have the conjunction of perill there should be some measure but warres are such therefore an end should be put unto them the argument is taken from the right fine of warre which is the establishing of peace and from humanity The second argument is from the consequent of commodity and incommodity proponed in this forme knowest thou not Ioab that the end of all civil warre is but sorrow and albeit thou hast the Victory yet thou hast not past the perill for if the battle be renewed the hazard may change and it is hard to bring men to the point of despare for fury ministrates armour and bitternesse will be in the end The third is from naturall and spirituall necessitudes we have Abraham one common Father one God one faith one sort of Sacraments and are all Brethren therefore it is most charitable and best seeming to desist OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 26. A Fit argument of dissuasion we have here against all civil dissentions within any Christian Kingdome professing the truth amongst whatsoever Persons within Church or commonwealth let the Midianites thrust their swords in to one anothers bowells and Sampsons foxes carry firebrands between them looking diverse wayes but let Abrahams voyce be heard amongst professours let there be no discord between thee and me for we are Brethren and Moses gentle rebuke accepted to the Hebrew who was in the wrong why smitest thou thy fellow It greiveth Rebecca then the strugling of her two Sonnes in her womb and for the divisions of Ruben are great thoughts of heart and so should it greive all godly hearts any schisme or rent in Church or Commonwealth 2. Abner provoked hoping assuredly to have given the foile to Joabs small Army but in the mean while he receives the same so man propones but God dispones neither should he that putteth on his armour boast as he that puts it off for oftimes he that diggeth a pit for his neighbour doth unawares fall therein himself witnesse the sword of Saul brandisht for David the gallowes of Haman set up for Mordecai the hungry Lyons prepared for Daniel and the judgement of stoning given out against Susanna 3. Vers 27. Ioab in his answer to Abner turning over the blame upon him witnesseth what was Davids part in this battle towit defensive onely and that he would never have made persuit nor sought by bloodshed or cruelty violently to have enlarged his Kingdome but contented him self with his lot and suffered that wrong of withholding and usurping his right till the Lord had redressed the same Thus are the godly patient and peaceable violent in nothing but by holy zeal taking the Kingdome of Heaven by force 4. Vers 28. Ioab in hearkning unto the Counsell of Abner though his adversary teacheth us to receive the truth at whosoevers hands non quis sed quid dicat attendendo and to make good
through despaire This is the difference of the kingdome of God the kingdome of Satan both fight but in great diversity in causes forme weapons conductours and therefore in great diversity of end and event likewise for albeit Satan fought against God and his Christ yet daily in spight of his supposts the kingdome of darkness declines and shall decay and the kingdome of light increase till at length as Paul affirmeth in that glorious triumph Satan shall be trodden under foot and then shall be accomplished that which the Father speaketh to his Christ Psalm 110. The Lord said to my Lord sit at my right hand till I make thine enemies thy footstoole OBSERVATIONS 1. IN the type between the kingdome of David and the kingdome of Christ we have to consider that like as there was perpetuall warre between the house of Saul and the house of David Even so in the kingdome and Church of Christ there is not only hostility between the same and the manifest enemies thereof but even in her selfe and own bosome there hath been is and shall be for the tryall of the elect perpetuall debates sects schismes and variances and therefore the wombe of the Church is fitly resembled to Rebecca's wherein is much wrangling and this is correspondent to our Saviours warning and prediction of the estate of the Church in the latter daies as the Apostle likewise plainly foretold 2 Pet. 2. 1. c. And may be amplified by examples of all ages before the flood between the seed of Seth and Cain who were brethren after the flood between Shem and Cham before the law between Isaac and Ishmael Jacob and Esau Joseph and his brethren between Moses and Kora's company after the law David and Sauls house here Judah and Ephraim and under the Gospell between Christ and his disciples and the high-priest and doctors of the Law of Moses between the Fathers in the primitive Church and hereticks and this day between us requiring reformation of religion and our adversaries maintaining corruption and mens inventions and the like debates shall continue till that glorious coming of Christ Jesus to the full triumph over Satan and heresie In the meane time let us with David and all the faithfull prepare our selves for the battle with constant faith and couragious patience that having fought that good fight and finished our course being faithfull unto the death we may obtaine the crowne of life 2. The diverse ends of these two houses offer to us the diverse ends of the warfare of Gods children and their estate and of the children of the world The one leads to prosperity the other runnes to decay for as David saith blessed is the man that putteth his trust in God for he shall not be ashamed in the day of trouble and on the contrary as Jeremiah affirmeth cursed is the man who putteth his trust in man and maketh flesh his arme This diversity is proved in the preservation of Noah Lot Abraham the patriarches Moses David and the remanent good kings in Israel also of Israel it selfe in Egypt and in Babylon and the Church of Christ in all ages pressa nunquam oppressa whose bow hath abiden strong through the mighty God of Jacob and is so built on her rock that the gates of hell shall not prevaile against her whereby Daniels stone hewed out without hands shall and hath bruised all her enemies into ashes as those sudden and fearefull punishments and wonderfull alterations of the estates of the tyrannies of the world do testify like mighty Islands moved out of their places sometime by water by fire by sword and sometimes by other extraordinary plagues and punishments being wasted as it were thereby examples hereof both in holy and prophane histories do testify Upon the hope of which end let us be encouraged in our Christian warfare that even so shall the estate of Mahomet and that Roman Antichrist have the like decay 3. The reason of this diversity was both in the matter of the cause and forme of proceeding whereupon is noted what is the reason of the increase and standing of all estates and what is the true reason of their fall and decay righteous conquest and conscionable behaviour is the one and unjust usurpation and tyranny is the other this is manifest by examples of all ages and histories and agrees with the nature of Gods righteous Judgments Now after the generall proposition the particular meanes of the increase of Davids house are set down The first whereof is said to be the multitude of his Children born to him in Hebron the eldest was Amnon whom Absolom slew afterwards the second Chileab whose proper name was Daniel 1 Chron. 3. And by accident called Chileab by interpretation like to the Father whereof the Hebrewes assigne the reason that he should not be esteemed the sonne of Nabal the Carmelite The third is Absolom the sonne of Maaca daughter to Tolmai the King of Geshur the Amalakite descended of Edom who is not reckoned amongst Davids wives that came from Ziklag to Hebron because then she had not as yet performed all the solemnities requisite in purging her selfe and renouncing her superstitious gentilisme being but lately taken captive as is supposed in that battle 1 Sam. 28. and for her beauty joyned to David This Absolom her sonne after rebelled against his Father and was slaine by Joab The fourth is Adoniah the sonne of Aggith afterwards executed by Salomon The fifth Shephatiah the sonne of Abital which two were supposed to have been Sauls wives whereof mention is made hereafter in Nathans reason to David 2 Sam. 12. 8. The sixt Ithream the sonne of Eglah whom Josephus supposeth to be Nathan of whom descended Christ which Eglah is peculiarly and only called Davids wife some thinking it to be for her obscure birth that she merited not to have her progenie nominated some said that she was most noble and therefore has the chief attribute being supposed to been Micol Sauls daughter who was restored to him fruitfull now but barren only after that reproach of David 2 Sam. 6. 20. And some because this woman was best beloved and therefore called Eglah which signifies a calfe but the better opinion seemeth to be that this attribute is to be meant in common with Eglah and all the former nominated OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 2. WE see the great providence of God towards David in not giving him the burthen and care of Children in the time of his hot persecution when he was hunted like a Partridge from place to place to be either a prey to his Enemies or whose straits with their Mothers should have been either a snare to him or grieved him more a great deale then his own danger But now he giveth him Children in Hebron who should not be so much burthen as before but benefits as props and pil●ars to uphold his house thus is our God a provident and wise Father to his own Children he knoweth the best time when to bestow
as here when Abner and Ishboseth are making all their power against David even then they are divided a sunder and David is freed from danger and in our own time when that high enterprise of subverting Church and commonwealth Prince and people by gunpowder was contrived and brought to the point of execution within this land then the Lord mightily discovered and disappointed the same to the confusion of the enemies his Churches comfort and praise of his name for ever as he had-dispersed also and disappointed that Spanish invincible armado of Spaine in 88 before 2. As in the time of the highest machinations of the wicked being combined together the Lord bringeth all their counsells to nought so we see that God maketh their dissentions amongst themselves being divided to tend to the peace and quietness of his Church thus God made the incursion of the Philistines upon Sauls borders an occasion for him to retire from compassing David in the wilderness of Maon to defend his land thus likewise did the Lord put a hook in the nostrills of Sinacherib and made the invasion of the King of Egypt an occasion for him to returne from Jerusalem and persuit of good King Hez●kiah so Pauls delivery is occasioned by a dissention amongst his accusers And here Ishboseths accusation of Abner is made to be an occasion of variance for the peace of David Let us ever rely then upon our provident and powerfull God who can draw light out of darknesse sweetnesse out of the strong as Sampsons ridle saith and peace out of discord and who hath infinit means to comfort his own Church with and hath all hearts in his hands to turne them what way he pleaseth 3. In the variance of these two we see there is no solid and constant friendship amongst the wicked for that which is in God is onely like unto him immutable and sure and worthy of the name of amity the other being more properly conspiracies as they are called Psalm 2. Which God shall dissolve and undo a clear example whereof we have in that league between Abimelech and the men of Sechem between whom notwithstanding the Lord sent an evil Spirit of variance that the blood of Gideons Sonnes might be revenged whereof both were guilty Let us not therefore make such friendship as is spoken of in the 50. Psalm 18. Nor be like Sampsons foxes tyed together or Simeon and Levi Brethren in evil but let our friendship be in God and our concurrance be to holy duties 4. Vers 7. Saul leaves behind him Rizpah a concubine who is here the occasion of all this trouble between Ishboseth and Abner where we may see the Scorpions taile of sinne stings the posterity of a man oftimes when he lyeth in ashes witnesse the immediate former example of base Abimelech begotten in whoredome who after his Fathers death is reserved as it were to be the burrean of his 70. lawfull begotten Brethren 5. We perceive that albeit reprehensions be lawfull in nature yet they should be prudently and timorously used otherwise they may import more hur than profit as we see here in Ishboseths example this moved the preacher to say a word spoken in due season is like aples of gold with pictures of silver Therefore let our reprehensions be after due tryall spoken in love observing the necessary circumstances of time place and person c. And uttered to that end that we may winne our Brother from his sinne to God 6. Vers 8. In Abner we see how impatient the wicked are at the rebuke of sinne that they altogether misregarding God and authority cannot be appeased till they be avenged on them who reprove them this is our corrupt nature till we be reformed by grace and that strong man who rageth within us being loath to depart till he be cast out by that stronger Jesus Then rebukes shall be unto us like sweet ointment and pretious balme this naturall hatred to be reformad wee see in Pharaoh Ahab Jeroboam Herod and many others of all ranks 2 Chron. 36. 14 15. 7. In the ambitious recitall of his high deservings Abner sheweth here that the wicked for wordly benefits would be winked at in the commission of sinne else no longer shall the river of their bounty flow then the fountain of wholesome admonition beginne to be opened and in all things they shall willingly hear till you come to their Herodias but there you loose them Let Gods servants then be free of them that they may be faithfull with them 8. Also in upbraiding to Ishboseth ingratitude let us learn never to expect sure amity nor upright thankfulnesse at the hands of men whom we would benefit with the detriment of our own conscience as Abner did here Ishboseth But be persuaded th●t thereby we shall make ourselves vile in their accompt and their favour which we have so hunted after with misregard of God conscience the Lord shall in the end turn into detestation of us accepting of the deed tending to their commodity but hating the doer thereof with an evil conscience Let us then approve our selves above all and in all to our gratious God who will both praise and reward his own 9. In Abners threatning we see the nature of high exalted and ambitious courtiers who would have their Princes to serve their appetites else in discontentednesse they will not regard to hazard if they can the estate and condition both of King and Kingdome 10. Also we may behold the admirable presumption and boldnesse of dust and ashes against the omnipotent creator when man is not indued with grace which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to fight against Gods known ordinance and to resist his manifested decree albeit the same be confirmed by his oath therefore saith Abner as the Lord hath sworn not considering that the pot is in the hand of the potter ever to do there with as it pleaseth him best Let this teach us therefore the duty of humility considering what we are both by nature and corruption dust towit and repyning clay voyde not onely of will or performance of good but highly rebellious and stubborne in evil against God till grace doth renew us 11. Vers 11. In Ishboseths timorousnesse and pusillanimity we see where the fear of God is not there worldly fear soon dasheth and occupieth the minde but where Gods fear is and the maintenance of a good cause there is true courage and wonderfull holy boldnesse This made Eliah bid Obadiah go tell his Master Abab that he was there and would shew himself unto him albeit through all Kingdomes about he had straitely sought for him this made Job likewise in his greatest calamity to say though mine adversary would write a book against me would not I take it upon my shoulder and bind it as a crown unto me I would tell him the number of my goings and go unto him as a Prince This made the Apostles in like manner answer
their brother Joseph in this work of Abner and of Judas against Christ c. 8. Vers 13. In Davids yeilding and acceptation of Abners offer we see that albeit he hath a good cause yet he neglects no occasion of secondarie meanes offered which is an example of imitation for as men are said to contemne God who relye altogether upon seconds so are they to be thought to tempt God who altogether rejects the use of the lawfull seconds Asa then ought not to put his trust more in the Physitians then in God neither should Naman despise to wash himselfe in the waters of Jordan our Saviour also will not cast himselfe down from the pinnacle of the temple neglecting the ordinary degrees nor Paul suffer the mariners to depart out of the boate albeit it was revealed to him that both he and his company all should be safe for it is written saith Christ thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God 9. Vers 15. In Ishboseth his fact of restitution of Michol we see the nature and practise of the gyant oppressors of the world and violent usurpers of other mens rights in a small thing especially if it concerne not them greatly like Michol they will seem very equitable and conscionable but in a great thing which is in their own possession and very gainfull or pleasant unto them such as the kingdome which Ishboseth usurpeth here they will by no meanes hearken to the restitution thereof Herod therefore will heare and obey John the baptist in many things so he touch not his having of Herodias and Pharaoh will beare with Moses and let the people go untill he deny that their sheep and cattle shall abide but then nothing but packing to Moses and that he see his face no more under paine of death The pythoniss masters can abide Paul and Sylas doctrine very well likewise so long as they loose not the hope of their gaine by her divination but when they saw that to be gone nothing but tumult and accusation the like example we have in the smiths Demetrius and Alexander and in many unjust usurpers both of God and mans right now a daies who will heare and be friends in any thing so that their gainfull Diana be not oppugned 10. Vers 16. In Phaltiel we have how difficult restitution is of things unlawfully usurped there being a blinding and bewitching desperate inchantment upon the heart ever therewith so that albeit with Achan they know that without a heavy curse they cannot possess the execrable things yet with perill of soule body estate their coveting heart will take it Achab though he should loose his life and kingdome for it he will have Naboths vineyard while Christ then come into the house look not that Zaccheus will make restitution or while the Idole of covetousness is in the hearts of men that they will abhorre to commit sacriledge stolen waters are so sweet and hid bread so pleasant but they know not that death is there and that the reward is the depth of hell for it is a destruction to a man to devoure that which is sanctified and by wickedness a man cannot be established neither shall riches availe in the day of wrath but the roote of the righteous shall not be moved and righteousness only shall deliver from death 11. In the behaviour of Phaltiel not only following Michol but mourning after her shewing by the first how loath he was to forsake her and by the second what griefe it was to him her desertion we see that illicite pleasures are like the Scorpion having ever the sting of sorrow in the end witness the looseness of the primitive world the voluptie of Sodom the ravishing of Dinah the love of Dalilah the adultery with Bersheba with sundry others but especially that eternity of weeping wailing and gnashing of teeth which the voluptuous wicked shall endure for their momentarie pleasure taking in the deceivable delights of sinne in that great day of exchange and reward like Esau who for the red pottage lost the blessing and was forced to weepe bitterly therefore thereafter II SAM Chap 3. from the 17. verse to the 22. THe persuasion of Israel unto defection from Ishboseth to David hath in it three arguments used by Abner à jucundo à pio ab utili 1. A jucundo It was your own suit formerly and your pleasure to have David to be your King and in deliberation between David and any of Sauls posterity you choosed rather and preferred him as Abner well knew in his familiarity with them now therefore take your pleasure and choose him 2. A pio It is the will of God that so it should be and that by Samuel plainly declared and notified unto all for God hath said it whose word is most true and which without gainstanding it becometh you in piety to embrace 3. A commodo He will save you from all your Enemies which is a great advantage and for that end God hath appointed him to rule over you whose promise is your warrant And in all this he perswadeth most carefully and particularly the Benjamites who were harder to be induced in regard of their naturall conjunction with the house of Saul But at last having cunningly effectuate his purpose at all hands he goeth accompanied with 20 specialls of Israel to Hebron unto David by presence to ratifie that which by message he had covenanted and to shew unto David his diligence credit and convoy of the errand and what he had effectuated Unto whom David maketh a royall banquet as a symbole of their new contracted amity Wherein for satisfaction of the doubt rejected to this place we affirme plainly that David erred 1. In temeritie or forme not consulting with God according to the command and practise of the Godly And 2. In substance or matter in entring in familiarity and entertaining a notorious wicked man with whom according to the apostolik Canon he should not have eaten In the end Abner goeth and promiseth to reduce all Israel arrogantly challenging unto himselfe so great a place in that kingdome where there was a King of such simplicity and pusillanimity as Ishboseth was OBSERVATIONS 1. IN Abners perswasion of Israel to defection from Ishboseth to David first as we see the nature and practise of many ambitious and crafty wicked men who place their chiefe standing and promotion in the disquieting of other mens estates and fisheth ever best in disturbed waters by the weakening and variance of others strengthening and enriching themselves So againe we note the wonderfull working of God in making that same man who perswaded Israel from David to adhere to Ishboseth now from Ishboseth to make defection and adhere to David and so to undoe that which he had formerly done and turne his course contrary so powerfull is God in overruling the wicked and here his Children want comfort or his work for them be unwrought he will make their and his Enemies the
like may be seen Let us beware then to loose in such quarrell 's the bridle to our affections but ever speak our particular justly with a diligent providence and care that thereby we be not offensive unto the estate publicke 3. Vers 24. In Ioabs manner of seeking to effectuate his purpose by dilating the fraudulent nature of Abner and that to prye into Davids estate and to circumvent him he had onely come and so concluding that David had done too simply in dimitting him and therefore it were best that he should be recalled we see the godlesse nature of the wicked ever misconstruing the intentions of men to whom they bear the least grudge and malitiously and most unjustly detracting and slandering their Persons This Satanicall practise we see in the Author thereof Job 1. Chap. And in Achab against Naboth and Eliah Daniel and Susannas accusers●● the blasphemous Highpriest and Pharisees their calumnies against Christ and his Apostles and the most unjust opprobries of the Martyrs under the pensecuting Emperours the members and supposts of that cruell Dragon Where the contrary practise is of Gods Children not to backbite and uncharitably to construe mens intentions or make the worst of their indifferent actions but to be carefull to abstaine as well from the Murther of the tongue as of the hand it self knowing that the surviving same of man is more pretious unto him then is his peristing life 4. Vers 26. Likewise Ioab laboureth first to make his particular to be the Kings cause and when he cannot persuade the godly King in that forme then he goeth to practice by fained friendship This then is the nature of Atheists and ungodly worldlings first to colour their wicked pretences by the cloake of common causes and so to snare men and when they cannot this way prevail in that form of course to circumvent those whose harme they seek by dissimulate friendship or some such crafty means Let Princes therefore noble men and Magistrates learn here of David through too hasty credit and facility to beware that they suffer not their authorities in this manner to be abused And let private men be prudently suspitious and providently wary of the coloured friendships of the subtile and ungodly because the event is so perillous It being ever their nature to cloak their evil purposes with good pretenses as the examples of Sauls alliance with David for a snare Ioabs saluation of Amasa Absolons entertainment of Amnon with a feast and his treason thereafter Herods speech to the wisemen and Iudas kisse with sundry others do testify 5. In that he diviseth one snare that assuredly shall intrap Abner as is aforesaid if another fail we see how plentifull and ripe the wicked are in their impious inventions to accomplish their godlesse purposes and how diligent they are and restlesse in their executions that one way shall not sooner misgive but presently they shall attempt another that old experienced Serpent being their crafty schoolmaster and they docile in his Doctrine Thus when bondage and burdens cannot waste Israel Pharaoh can finde out a way by the Midwives to kill their male Children and when that succeeds not causes his Souldiers to drowne them in the River So look to Herods wayes and plots how to apprehend Christ the Highpriests and Scribes how to insnare him and put him to death and their Counsels With the practises of heathen Emperours how hereafter to suppresse his Gospel what nets were likewise spread by Saul to intrap David by the Philistines to get their adversary Sampson and by Achab and Iesabel to get Naboths Vineyard c. But in end all their witty wickednesses runne at last amain to their utter ruine they are caught at last in their own snares and are made fast by the fetters of their own devises the true wisdome of God in the godly having the contrary success 6. Vers 27. Abner had Davids protection and safe conduct whereunto he trusted but he wanted the Lords and therefore is murthered Let men therefore labour to be reconciled with God principally and to have his powerfull protection to watch every where over them otherwise that of man shall be found in vaine Seek Abrahams buckler therefore and unto Davids tower of refuge and then with Jacob because thou hast prevailed with God thou shalt prevaile with man and he who was with Joseph in the prison with Daniel in the denne with the three Children in the fiery furnace and with Israel in the desert wilderness shall shew himselfe to be unto thee as that Captaine of the Lords host who appeared unto Joshua armed for thy defense And as Elisha said unto Gehezi there shall be more with thee then is against thee though an Army were come to kill thee with Davids confidence Psal 4. 8. Thou shalt also lye downe and rise up in safety and he who hath numbered thy haires shall not let one of them fall to the ground without his good providence amd will 7. Abner was a bloody man and therefore dieth a bloody death so that blood cryeth for blood though Magistrates draw not the sword yet it is impossible that the gyants and centaures of the world shall escape Gods punishments howsoever they be able to escape the ordinary corrections of men Examples in Pharaoh Adoni-bezek Saul Joab Sinacherib Achab Antiochus Herod and sundry others that were punished Then let not wicked men boast in their favours remissions and oversights which they have of worldly Princes for without serious repentance to prevent Gods just judgments the Lord hath Joabs and such like instruments to raise up and correct when he best pleaseth 8. The time when Abner is slaine is immediatly after his reconcilement with David and his coming from the royall banquet that was made unto him even when he was assuring himselfe of peace then suddenly came his destruction Thus are the wicked in the midst of their security punished and when they least look for it cometh their visitation Examples the primitive world Sodome Pharaoh the Philistines smothering by Sampson Eglons death Balthassars overthrow and sentence thereof Hamans dejection Sisera's humbling the rich fooles departing Herods consuming and that glorious whore spirituall Jesabel her abasing Revel 18. 8. 9. Joab killeth Abner thus is one wicked man made to be anothers scourge Thus also are the Midianites made to kill one another Ammon and Moab to rise up first against Mount Seir or the Idumeans and then each one of destroy another in Mizpah Sinacheribs sonnes to stab him in the Temple of his God Misroch Ishboseths two servants to kill him on his bed And where God want scourges he shall make the same not only to proceed out of their own bowels as is said of Sinacherib but shall make themselves to be so to themselves sharp whips and cruell burrean's as in the examples of Saul Judas and Achitophel 10. In all this we see Davids kingdome is not promoted by Abners treason as David so expected but rather by the away
Ioab though importing his quietnesse by ding him of such a foe that troubled him and commodity likewise having thereby the more easy accesse unto the rest of the Kingdome but altogether abhorreth it far unlike to the Pythonesse Masters Act. 16. Or Demetrius the silver smith Act. 19. Who fearing the losse of their gain resisted the Gospel Even as sundry now a dayes will not forsake the errours of Papistry because pardons p●rgatory and suchlike are lucrative Doctrines Thus Pharaoh will not let● Israel go albeit God hath commanded because it is against his commodity and if they go he will have the cattel and sheep to remain And Ahab though against conscience and equity will have Naboths Vineyard because it is fruitfull and commodious Even so sacriledge must be so universally practised because though a sin it is very gainfull But what if a man gain the whole World if he loose his own soul saith our Master Christ 12. Vers 34. In Davids regrating the treacherous form of Abners death and commending his courage we see the very wicked have their own good parts and many excellent naturall gifts wherewith God hath indued them for their greater conviction when they abuse the same and whereunto otherwise is due their own praise As we may see in the examples of the ingenious ●inding out of arts in the posterity of Kain Goliahs strength Sauls talnesse Absoloms beauty Achitophels wisdome Asahels swiftnesse and such like And that the godly hath ever been accustomed omitting the evils of their very private Enemies to speak the best of all men not like the curious spiers of the more in their neighbours eye and sluggish neglecters of the beame in their owne or like that uncleane spirit delighting to record the turpitude of others and accuse man to man as he doth man to God 13. Vers 35. In the peoples coming to refresh David with meat as we see the loving and tender care of subjects towards their Princes worthy of imitation so in his answer again and protestation we see what true fasting is not an abstaining towit after a Popish and ridiculous form from grosser and some more common sorts of meat or flesh and in the mean while feeding on such more delicate rare and pampering dainties but as David did here from all manner of food till the evening 14. Vers 36. The success of his purgation is set down that as he wished so were the people satisfied and all Israel did surely acknowledge that it did not proceed any way from the King so to kill Abner Where we observe what happy issue the Lord giveth unto upright dealing David useth the ordinary meanes of clearing himselfe on the one part and the Lord who had the peoples hearts in his hands perswadeth them inwardly and assuredly by these meanes that David was altogether innocent and so the perill of insurrection upon any contrary suspition or detestation of the fact is quite taken away and happily prevented Let us labour then to have a good cause and lawfully with wisdome to prosecute the same referring the event to God which certainly shall be prosperous 15. In Davids sparing of Joab notwithstanding of the odiousness and evidence of the fact fearing Joabs greatness and the arme of flesh having Gods warrant of his law his frequent promises and assured protection also a good cause and happy beginnings already in the contrary we see the weakness of Gods Saints oftimes and how by carnall feare they are dash't in execution of their callings and wave in that assured confidence they ought to have in Gods doings and relying upon his own assistance and powerfull protection for as Jehosaphat saith in that exhortation of his unto the Judges of Judah take heed what you do for yee execute not the Judgments of man but of the Lord and he will be with you in the cause and Judgment wherefore let the feare of the Lord be upon you It is he then on whom men ought to relye and him they should feare who can cast soul and body into hell fire Wherefore the oversight of Magistrates their respits reprivings and remissions for blood are like odious and capitall crimes which can have no allowance by this unlawfull example and that because in the morall law of God and judiciall concerning the punishment of the prevarication thereof there is not permitted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or arbitrium but whatsoever God commandeth in the Lawes of his Word is stricti juris and may not be dispensed withall albeit in the constitutions of men that it be otherwaies 16. As in this sparing of Joab we see the weakness of the saints as is said so likewise we see the cause why many wicked men go free of ordinary punishment and what abuse is of Justice in this latter age even the worldly grandure of these gyants and fat kine of Bashan till the wind of Gods wrath shake bare the tops of these tall Cedars of Lebanon and cast them up by the root at last as David sayeth here The Lord shall reward the evill doer according to his wickedness and this is the hope of the oppressed and patience of the Saints II SAM Chap 4. from the 1. verse to the 8. IN the first verse of the former Chapter the generall proposition of the third and fourth Chapters was laid to be the history of the Civill warres between the houses of Saul and David the end whereof was that Sauls house decayed and the others waxed stronger This was confirmed by six arguments in the last Chapter and now in this Chapter we have the seventh importing the full and finall decay of the house of Saul and Davids advancement thereby For at this time there were but two males lawfully descended of Saul who could be contesters with David in the challenge of the Crowne Ishboseth Sauls sonne and Mephiboseth Jonathans sonne● for as for the sonnes of Rispah they were borne of concubinage and therefore according to the custome they received no inheritance but only a portion of goods as Abraham provided for the Children of Keturah now of these two Ishboseth is impotent in mind and unworthy murthered by his servants of that same tribe with him and Mephiboseth is impotent in body and lamed by a fall which he got by his nurse and so not only young but crooked and unable to travell in the office of a King and therefore the house of Saul being thus totally decayed all Israel were forced to offer themselves to David Then in this present Chapter we have in generall the last and extreame decay of Sauls house by the misfortune of these two fornamed This generall hath three particulars the first containeth the decay of Ishbo●eth unto the 8. Vers The second is the inability of Mephiboseth interjected in the 4. Vers The third is the justice and piety of David in revenging of Ishboseths death and burying his head till the 12 and last Vers In the decay of Ishboseth we have three things
to be considered 1. Is himself 2 His murtherers 3. His murther As to himselfe or his estate It is said that after he heard of the death of Abner his hands were feeble and all Israel seeing the pusillanimity of their head and that their captaine Abner by whom they hoped to be reconciled to David was slaine thinking themselves now exposed to a greevous danger knowing the magnanimity of David they are likewise afraid By the feeble hands of Ishboseth according to the Hebrew phrase is signified the discouragement both of his heart and externall members of his body as we say of a man altogether dejected he hath neither heart nor hand so that here he is set forth as a man destitute of all help or comfort either from himselfe being so affected or from his people being so afraid and so this usurper now is fallen in extreame and irremediable misery The causes of this his desperate dejectedness being 1. Inwardly his guilty conscience fighting against himselfe and outwardly the sword of David the stroakes whereof he likewise did feare And 2. the awaytaking of Abner on whom he reposed for defence and on the force of the Army and therefore when that faileth him he falleth into desperation The second thing to be considered in him is that being thus desperate of his matters he giveth himselfe to sleep and sluggish security The cause of which sleep at noontide some assigne to the custome so used in those hot countries as Josephus affirmeth Some to the extream heavyness of his desperate mind making his eyes likewise heavy to sleep like Jonas in the ship or the disciples in the garden and others attribute it to his sluggish and negligent nature against the duty of a good Prince who should be vigilant domi foris to administer his kingdome aright and to prevent both private and publick perills either of his person or estate which he here doth not as we may see in the history of his murther His murtherers are described 1. From their names Baanah which signifieth affliction and Rechab a rydar thus affliction overtook him and that speedily as a post or ridar 2. They are called his men and of one tribe with him so neerly were they joyned with him in service and kindred 3. They are said to have beene Captaines of bands which some understand to be of companies in the Camp over which they were set by Abner and others as the Rabbines expone these bands to have been such as were when there was no King in Israel and when as Debora saith the high waies were not occupied and the travellers went through by paths even robbers and common oppressors of men 4. Their parentage is pointed at they were the sonnes of Rimmon and of the Citie of Beroth which then was usurped by the Philistines since the battle of Gilboa albeit within the territory of Benjamin according to the division Ioshua 18. 25. From hence these fled at that time to Gittaim another towne in the same tribe as Nehemiah 11. 33. 5. The carriage in this business is dissimulate for they faine themselves to be of the most peaceable sort of men even merchants whereby they might so be into the less suspicion The fact of the murther is very odious in all the circumstances 1. The person murthered is a King and a Kings sonne 2. The murtherers are of his own subjects of one tribe with him and his men 3. The place and time is even in his own Chamber and bed and while he is a sleep in the noontide of the day 4. The form is by treason and cruelly by cutting off his head 5. The cause as may be seen in their journey and speech to David is to gratify him whom they perceived entring in the whole kingdome and so to work their own promotion being incouraged to this fact by Davids banqueting of Abner for perswading Israel to make defection from Ishboseth and thinking that much more will the killing of his person be acceptable and rewarded as also by the impunity of Joab for the death of Abner and so concluding that if David did oversee the slaughter of Abner who was reconciled and now Davids sworne servant to bring all Israel to him assuredly he will reward the slayers of Ishboseth who stood out and had the only claime of the whole kingdome In the fourth verse is interjected the history of Mephiboseth how that upon the newes of the discomfiture of Saul and Jonathan his nurse flying with him when he was a child of five yeares old he did fall and thereby became lame of his feet and so by that impediment was made unable for royall government chiefly in Israel whose King was required to be without inability either in body or mind seeing they were compassed about with so many enemies to withstand This fall of Mephiboseth is recorded to shew Gods speciall providence therein that so the kingdome might come to David according to the promise Some think that this history is rather interjected to let us understand the government of the estate of Israell when Ishboseth is so unworthy and feeble in mind and Mephiboseth so feeble in body therefore no marvell that such wicked men banded and rose against the estate and quietness of the land and took such ●udacity to commit the like insolencies and treason OBSERVATIONS 1. IN the feebleness of Ishboseth we see how powerfull the dashing of a guilty conscience is when any triall or trouble occurre the terrour of this inward and homebred tribunall shaking the very foundations of all the faculties and powers of the soule and making the pillars of the body like those of the house of Dagon which Sampson overthrew to bow and smite one against another as did the knees of Belshazzar so bitter things doth this spirituall hand write in the register of that book which fully at that last day shall be opened and by which every one shall be judged That the very glanse of one account given by a wakening trouble disquieteth and dismayeth so that the person touched is like that house foolishly built upon the sand which when a storme cometh cannot abide the same but falleth Where the testimony of a good conscience on the contrary is both a feast and a fortress Examples of this dashing power when triall or trouble cometh we see in Josephs brethren in Achan Saul Belshazzar Judas and many more 2. The second lesson is instruction likewise for confirming of faith in Gods infallible promises and is taken from this ground Ishboseth in an evill cause and course relying only upon Ab●er and the people so soon as Abner is slaine and the people are afraid he falleth into despaire whereupon we gather That as in all causes and especially evill the way to desperation is to contemn Gods protection and relye altogether upon man's and worldly meanes As we may see in the examples of the Philistims when Goliah is slaine in Haman when he looseth Ahasuerus favour and others so
not suffer the good and laudable intentions of the godly to be unrewarded much more their pious and commendable actions no not a cup of cold water given to one of his which shall want its reward Which should be a great encouragement to pious and good works 16. As it is God that raises great houses so it is he that brings down great houses for their sinning against him and this is the cause why many great houses in the Land are fallen and their honour laid in the dust because they honoured not God as they ought in time of their prosperity 17. Vers 12. Where it is said when thy dayes are fulfilled we see the shortnesse of mans life numbred not like the richfools Arithmetike by many years but by dayes as Jacob professed and these few and evil so did Job count his life but by dayes as Moses also taught the people to do Psal 90. 12. 18. Likewise we see here that your life is limited and there is a fulfilling of our dayes which cannot beyond Gods pleasure be shortned or prolonged he being that secret Palmoni or numberer which we see professed by Job 7. 1. and 14. 14. 19. Where it is said when David should sleep with his Fathers we see what the death of the godly is as Rev. 14. 13. And therefore no more to be feared then sleep which makes us ly down in our beds or rest to a weary traveller or a hard labourer Job 7. 2. Which made the Apostle to desire to be dissolved that he might be with Christ and Revel 14. 13. to call it a rest from our labours 20. The Lord promises after Davids death to blesse his posterity whereby we see that it is true which the Lord sayes Exod. 20. 6. That he will shew mercy to thousands of them who love him and keep his commandments and that it is a happy blessing to come of good and godly parents if their ofspring insist in their footsteps 21. Vers 13. Where it is said that Davids Sonne towit Solomon should build a house to his name which was a greater honour to him then the honour of his Kingdome we see that in like manner it is the greatest honour that any Prince can attain unto to be the builder not of a materiall house but of the Church of Christ and promoter of his truth like a nursing Father to the Church as the godly Kings of Judah were and the godly Christian and Orthodox Emperours which would to God that all Christian Kings would now adayes consider and that they would not prop up Antichrists throne and persecute the true Church of Christ For this should be the way of the establishment of their Kingdomes as is here promised to him who should build the Temple 22. Vers 14. The Lord saies moreover that he should be his Father and he his sonne which is the greatest honour that any King can have and the only true nobility which Kings or any can claime unto and wherein to their singular comfort the poorest Godly house has a share and perceive therein the admirable love of God as the Apostle shewes 1 Joh. 3. 1. 23. But as this is the ground of singular and manifold comforts as of his love to us even when he is correcting us Heb. 12. 6. His care for us his protection of us and granting any good thing to us c. So this teaches us also our duty of sonnes to love him to obey him to honour him to serve him to be zealous of his honour to relye in him and his Fatherly goodness for all things we stand in reach of and at last for that heavenly inheritance which he has prepared for us 24. And if he commit iniquity where it is said I will chastise him with the rods of men c. We see the Godliest may have and have their own failings and falls as we see in David Salomon and Peter when they are ●eft never so little or short while to themselves or force of temptation and therefore should eve● be watchfull over themselves with prayer and as is said Phil 2. 12. Be working out your owne salvation with feare and wit trembling 25. Also here we see what the committing of iniquity procures even to the Godliest towit sharp correction as David and Salomon found And therefore let not the wicked though spared for a time expect impunity but that dreadfull punishment abides them who neither repent as the Godly do and who make a trade of sinne as Psal 1. 1. and as we see Psal 73. 18. Nor yet let any think that want of correction and prosperity here is a mark of Gods Children 26. We see also when the Godly are corrected that those whom the Lord permits to trouble and afflict them are called the Children of wickedness Vers 10. They are nothing else but like the rods of men wherewith they chastise their dearest Children for their good and therefore as the Godly with David in Shimeis railing and as Job spoke Job 1. 21. They should look up to the hand of God so when the Lord by such hath sufficiently chastised them he will cast the rod in the fire which should be a terrour to all wicked persecutors and troublers of his Israel 27. Where it is said Vers 15. But my mercy shall not depart away from him as I took it from Saul Here we see with what sweetness the Lord tempers the bitter cup of the sufferings of his own which should comfort them in their sharpest corrections and be their prayer And what is the difference between the punishments of the wicked and corrections of the Godly the one is a mixed cup with the sweetness of mercy tending to conversion like the dealing of a Father with his Child the other a cup of wrath without mixture of mercy or love as we see Revel 14. 10. Tending to eversion like the dealing of a Judge with a malefactor condemned to death 28. Vers 17. Where it is said That according to these words and according to all this vision so did Nathan speak unto David We see the fidelity of the Lords Prophet which all his servants in the Ministry should imitate and that he is not ashamed to recall and recant what formerly he had said to David Vers 3. Upon better ground and information from the Lord. Which should teach all men humbly ever to submit to truth and quit errour and not to stand upon their owne credit in maintaining what once they have professed without retractation the contrary whereof we see good Aug●stine did to his ever and singular commendation II. SAM Chap. 7. from the 18. Verse to the end FOllowes the second part of the Chapter wherein is set down Davids thanksgiving both for the promise made to himselfe as also to his posterity and for the benefits past present and promised which he concludes with a petition for the continuance of the Lords favour and performance of his gracious promises Which Eucharisticall oration has 1. It
destruction howsoever he pretended friendship and love And so they first wrong David himself in his name before they wrong his servants in their Persons 2. It sets down the barbarous abuse of Davids messengers by the pernicious and ill counsell of these Princes upon the forenamed unjust groundlesse suspition Vers 4. Which was the shaving off the one half of their beards cutting of their garments in the middle even to their buttocks and sending them away Whereupon is set down 1. What David did when he heard thereof Vers 5. Towit he sent to meet his servants because they were greatly ashamed and directs them to stay at Jericho the first bordering Town untill their beards were grown and then to return 2. Is set down what the Ammonites did who were descended of that incestuous copulation of Lot with his younger Daughter Towit they prepare for warre against David and for this cause they hire the Syrians with a thousand talents of silver as we see 1 Chron. 19. 6. To assist them whereas it had been better and more wisely done by them to have resented their wrong offered reparation and sought reconciliation with David so potent and victorious and a valorous Prince as the event proved 3. We have the motive that made them so to prepare this warre which was because they saw that they stank before David a usuall phrase in Scripture to expresse the hatefullnesse of any to others as Gen. 34. 30. Iacob sayes to Simeon and Levi yee have made me to stink amongst the inhabitants of the Land So Exod. 5. 21. the people say to Moses you have made our savour to be abhorred in the eyes of Pharaoh And so the Ammonits saw that they were become hatefull to David and their fact abhorred by him 4. Is set down Vers 7. to the 13. Davids preparation to meet them and Joab and his Brother Abishai their prudent and valiant managing of the battle Unto which is subjoyned Vers 13. and 14. The victory over the Syrians and Ammonits 5. from the 15. verse to the 19. Is set down the Syrians renewed battle against David at Helam a Town not farre from Iordan and his victory over them whereby Vers 19. they became wholly subdued so that they never helped the Children of Ammon any more From all which we may see 1. The cause of these warres that moved them 2. The persons who were ingaged in them 3. The military discipline followed by both parties And 4. the successe and end of them but before we come to the observations 1. We will speak somewhat of the persons whom Hanun hired as mercenary souldiers to assist him And 2. of their hire first then mention is made of the Syrians of Bethzehob and of Zoba who were subjects to Hadarezar great King of Mesopotamia Who were moved to follow Ammon for two causes the one for commodity the other to reject their sworn subjection to David Chap. 8. 6. Next we have these of King Maacah which were in that part of Syria which lies betwixt Gilead and on the east towards that part of Arabia called Trachonites supposed to be a part of the territory of Ammon above Jordan neer to Mount Hermon Josh 13. Thirdly we have these of Ishtob at the east part from Ammon towards Arabia called the desert amounting all to 33000. Next then here is said to be a thousand talents of Silver 1 Chron. 19. 6. Which was a Hebrew weight each Talent containing 60. pound weight and each pound 25. common siccles reducing the siccle to a halfe ounce so that the Talent will amount in our Scots money to a thousand and five hundred pounds or 120. lib. Sterlin and above and the hundred Talents to 150000. lib. Scots so that the thousand Talents of Silver will amount unto 1500000. lib. Scots As for the discipline used in this warre on both parts the same was very prudent 1. On the part of Ammon and his confederates they divide their Army in two the Ammonites place themselves at Modeba a towne in Arabia belonging to Ruben Josh 13. 16. To be a retreate to them in case of overthrow as they made the same vers 15. As also to encounter with Israel in the front as they had appointed the Syrians to charge the Israelites on their reer and accordingly Joab in like manner like a wise and expert Generall perceiving his stratagem he also divides his Army in two the strongest part whereof he takes to be under his own conduct against the greatest number of the Syrians and the other part he gives to Abishai his brother to encounter with the Ammonites with a direction to help him if he saw the Syrians too strong for him and he to help Abishai if he saw the Ammonites too strong for him OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 1. IT is said that the King of Ammon died where we see that death is the common condition of all man-kind Kings as beggers wise as fooles and rich as poore so that 〈◊〉 pede pulsat regum turres pauperumque tabernus sceptra ligonibus aequat and neither power or prayer and intreaty wisedome or wealth can avoid the stroke thereof which all Kings and great men should consider to humble them and make them think of the account of their stewardship afterward 2. Vers 2. In Davids resolution to shew kindness to his Son as he shewed kindness to him we see his vertue of gratitude as in the former Chapter to Mephibosheth this being the only tribute that the Lord requires for all his benefits Psal 103. 2. And which we also owe to man so that the naturall man saies that we should receive benefits as the earth receiveth seed and labour to render the same with increase Et si ingratum dixeris omnia 3. The time of Davids remembrance of the King of Ammons kindness to him when he was in exile is now when he is setled in a peaceable and potent kingdome so that his high preferment makes him not forget the favours which he received in his low estate as Pharaoh's butler did and as many do now adaies 4. The kindness that he could not requite to the Father partly because of his inability before and partly because of the death of this King he now resolves to shew to the sonne where we see 1. That parents leave to their Children by their charity and good deeds a good treasure As also 2. That with honest and thankfull persons the remembrance of benefits dieth not with the benefit receavers 5. Where it is said that David sent to comfort Hanun by the hand of his servants We see that Children should be naturally affected with moderate sorrow for the death of their Pa●●nts although most part now inwardly rather rejoyce at the death of those by whom they may get a rich inheritance left unto them howsoever by externall shew in their garments they pretend sorrow such are worse then this Ammonite or Esau Gen. 27. 41. 6. Hereby likewise we see in Davids sending to
consanguinity by L●t their progenitor and David seekes to shew them favour and the Syrians are bound to David by oath Chap. 8. 6. Yet neither blood merits nor oath has any place when they have occasion to trouble David Whereon we observe that it is impossible that the true worshippers of God can have firme or long peace with Idolaters The reason whereof is assigned by Christ There can be no agreement between God and Belial The proof whereof is manifest by infinite examples and this in particular Which shewes to for-warne all such who serve God and feare him truly to expect no quietness nor security from Idolaters and Papists longer then they may have a fit occasion to execute their cruelty as the Massacre of Paris the Gun-powder-treason and the late Massacre of Protestants in Ireland can testify 22. The Syrians for hire joyne with the Ammonites without respect either to honour conscience danger or death that might ensue only for commodity Which shewes that covetousness is the root of all evill and produces sad effects as we see in Achan Judas and these Syrians here Which serves to warne men to beware thereof and specially men who follow the warres that they engage upon warrant of conscience and a good cause and not meerly for hyre or preferment the one flowing from covetousness and the other from pride and both from Satan as father of these vices 23. Vers 7. In Davids preparation to meet the Ammonites when he heard of their raising an Army We see the vigilant care that a good King should have of the safety of his people and repelling their enemies and of using lawfull meanes besides the confidence in God 24. Vers 11. In Joab's managing of this warre We see wisdome joyned with valour both requisite in a generall commander and in the mutuall support and help one of another against the common enemy the stronger to help the weaker We may also learne a common Christian duty to do the like as the Apostle exhorts Rom. 15. 1. The rich to help the poore and the wise the simple c. Especially pastours and leaders of Gods people to joyne as brethren in Unity and lend their help one to another against their common enemy 25. Vers 12. In Joabs oration to his Army he joynes with selfe-preservation the cause of religion for the Cities of God that is wherein Gods worship is established and professed and which the enemies would pollute with idolatry as the Romans used to say pro aris focis Whereby we see that in all lawfull warres the cause of God who is the Lord of hostes and gives the success and of religion is to be regarded and then as we see here the event proves the more prosperous and happy 26. Joab here does according to his vocation and leaves the success to God Whereupon we collect that the duty of every one in his calling civill or ecclesiasticall is to labour faithfully and to commit the success to God as the husband man does in sowing his ground and as Paul did plant and Apollos watered and left the grouth unto Gods dispensation Which serves to reform two errours the first of those who use not the lawfull means but relye on Gods providence and live on idle speculations The second who relye only on the means without seeking and depending on the Lords blessing on their labours 27. Vers 13. The success of the battle which is victory on Davids side and overthrow on A●nmon and the Syrian● Shewes 1. What is the end of giving and taking evill counsell and pertinacy in evill courses on Ammons part as also what is the punishment of perjury and perfidy as also of coveteousness on the Syrians part 2. The victory in Davids side serves for the comfort of the Godly that are in a good course and have a good cause though in greatest perills of enemies and that it is just that they who abuse favours should smart at last with judgments 28. Vers 15. The Syrians gather themselves againe to battle the second time to their greater destruction and fall and finall overthrow Whereby we see what it is to persist obstinately and proceed in an ill course and that thereby they draw on upon themselves greater destruction for they might have seen Gods hand against themselves before when they were subdued chap. 8. As also now againe when they were stronger being joyned with Ammon but Satan so blinded their eyes and hardned their hearts like Pharaohs that no bygone punishments would make them wise being driven on by Satan to their own destruction 29. Vers 19. At last being overthrowne they make peace with Israel in granting whereof after so many provocations and perfidie beside this last victory we see the peaceable and pious disposition of David as also his noble and royall inclination like the Lyons Parcere subjectis debellare superbos 30. They make their own peace only with David not including their late confederates who hired them the Ammonites whom they resolve not to help any more Whereby we observe what a vaine thing and unsure it is to trust or relye on the arme of flesh or friendship of men II SAM Chap 11. from the 1. verse to the 14. and from thence to the end FRom the fift Chapter to this present we have seen many morall vertues in David as piety magnanimity prudence gratitude and the like And now in this Chapter we have his fall and sinnes both of uncleanness and murther adultery and blood-guiltiness whereby he declined from the law of God altered his former course brought scandall upon religion many judgments on his house incurred Gods wrath and shame and confusion before men In the exposition of this tragicall history we shall consider 1. The circumstances of time places and persons when where and betwixt whom this Action is committed 2. The occasion and antecedents of this ungodly fact both on Davids and the womans part 3. The fact it selfe adultery and that of the highest kind 4. The consequence and things coincident with it and fiftly lay down some observations that arise there from Among the genuine circumstances that of time comes first expressed vers 1. When the yeare was expired at the time when Kings go forth to battle that is at the end of the former yeare and beginning of the yeare following at which time the heavens and aire beginne to be temperate and the pastures afford grass for horses which made the season convenient for warre Then David had directed Joab whilest himselfe abode at Jerusalem with the Army to go against Ammon whom he destroyed and beseiged Rabbah their Metropolitan City called afterwards by the Greeks Philadelphia even then when Davids estate is most prosperous and all his troubles neer an end in place of thankfulnesse to God therefore he gives himself to ease security and uncleannesse 2. The place is his Palace and plateform or roof of his house from whence he beholds with lusting heart and eye Bathsheba the
inducement to lust as it proved to Lot therefore who would eschew lust let them eschew ebriety II. SAM Chap. 11. from the 14. verse to the end OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 14. DAvid now sends a letter with Vriah to Joab to set him in the front of the battle that he might be killed Where we see as has been said that from one sin he falls in another and in the last as the worst of all whereby we observe 1. The nature of sin that it never goes alone but is like a chain one link whereof is tyed to another 2. That Satan where he may once get in a foot will never rest till he get in his whole body And 3. we see that oftimes God punishes sin by sin and man by his own iniquity till there cup be full and then followes judgment as we see in Pharaoh and others 2. Vriah carries with him the letter to Joab which was his own destruction and so does the wicked carry in the bosome of their own breast there dittay and accusation of their own guilty conscience before God in the day of their account which in like-manner is their owne destruction 3. David began to cover his sin by subtilty and fraud and now he comes from fraud to force and cruelty Thus doth Satan himself act first as an insinuating and subtile Serpent and who can transforme himself into an Angel of light to deceive and hereby if he cannot prevail he turnes a bloody Dragon by open persecution as we see Revel 12. And thus to do he teaches others whom he misleads as he did Pharaoh and in this place David 4. Hereby likewise we see that in the best of men their are the seeds and a naturall inclination to the grossest sins all the imaginations of the heart being onely evill continually which should serve to keep us humble and watchfull and to be earnest with God by prayer for grace and strength to resist the temptations of the Divell that we be not insnared to commsit sins which otherwise we would seem to abhorre in others 5. We see as in this so that adultery and unlawfull lusts is the chief argument of all tragicall Histories almost as we may see in the examples of the first World Sodom Sechem Israel with the Moabitish Women in the desart the warres between Israel and Benjamin Sampson and here in the example of David omitting prophane Histories as the destruction of Troy Thebes Carthage and others which teaches us that whoredome is not so light a sin as carnall men take it to be who call it but a trick of yo●th or the like seeing we see it punished with such sad judgements here and excluding from the Kingdome of Heaven hereafter 1 Cor. 6 9. Revel 22. 15. 6. Vers 16. As David directed Joab so he obeyed this wicked direction of the King and so becomes guilty likewise of the innocent blood of Vriah which was avenged on him 1 King 2. 28. Which should teach us not to obey the unjust commandments of superiours but as Peter said Act. 5. 29. We ought to obey rather God than man and to give unto God that which is Gods and then to Cesar that which is Cesars Honour also is pretended to Vriah but death is meant so doth Satan in his temptations 7. V. 17. Vriah an innocent man suffers and is killed whereupon we observe that it is not ever the will of God to give temporall deliverance from the cruelty of Tyrants or of Enemies as we see in the examples of the Prophets Apostles and Martyrs the reason is that thereby God will be glorified in their constant integrity good example of the like may be left behind them God may have just matter to punish Tyranny and cruelty the innocent sufferers may be translated to a better life in glory 8. We see in this fact first of uncleanesses next of Davids subtilty and last of cruelty whereunto he was instigated by Satan the properties of the Divell that he is an unclean Spirit full of subtilty and cruelty and that he makes them who obey him to take on his image and to be like himself 9. Vers 26. Batsheba mournes for her Husband when she hears of his death as for a Worldly losse but we reade not that she mourned for her sinne that procured his death which shews that many will be more grieved for any Worldly losse or crosse then for that which should grieve them most the offence of God the killing of their own souls and the losse of a heavenly Kingdome her sinne then was more worthy of her sorrow then her losse 10. Vers 27. Where it is said that the thing which David had done displeased the Lord which should teach us the like disposition to be ever displeased with sinne in any person whatsoever and to hate the same it being Satans image but not to hate the person who is created to the image of God as the Lord hated not Davids person but his sinfull action Therefore Paul affirmes That the end of excommunication the last of discipline should be to the destruction of sinne but that the soule may be pre●erved in the day of the Lord. Last consider that God had neversuffered so deare a Saint so fouly to fall if he had not meant to make him an example to all neither to presume that they may not sinne grosly nor to despaire if they sinne when they see David so to have fallen and so to have risen II SAM Chap 12. from the 1. verse to the 13. IN the preceding Chapter was the Tragicall history of Davids fall to be evited and fled and in this Chapter is the happy history of Davids rising by repentance to be imitated and followed This Chapter had these parts 1. The Lords commission to David by his Prophet Nathan to the 13. vers 2. Davids penitent confession and Nathans absolution of him in the name of the Lord from his sinne howsoever because by his uncleane fact he had given occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme the Child that was borne to him should die vers 13 14. 3. The sickness and death of the Child as Nathan had foretold with his deportment in the time of the Childs sickness and after the death thereof together with the reasons thereof which he gives to the Elders of his house 4. From the 24. vers to the 26. Davids comforting of his wife Bathsheba concerning the Child that was dead and the Lords giving unto him another sonne by her who was beloved of God whose name was Jedidiah by direction from God to Nathan and by Nathan to David And 5. Davids taking in of Rabbah of the Ammonites and the tortering of the people thereof and all other their Cities and then his victorious returne to Jerusalem From the 26. vers to the end First then we see that the first actor in Davids repentance is God his commission to Nathan and not that David seeks to God first by any act of his free
estimate to 7000. French Crowns and rich in precious stones he gets also a rich spoil of the City and by severall tortures after he had punished the inhabitants of Rabhah and all the other Cities of the Ammonites he returned victorious and triumphant to Jerusalem But before we proceed to the observatious some questious or doubts are to be resolved 1. How was Davids sin remitted and yet the punishment thereof which was threatned vers 10. and 11. retained I answer when God remits the sin he remits the vindict which temporall chastisements are not to the godly because 1. they proceed from his love Heb. 12. 6. as also are in their nature medicinall corrasives And 3. their end or scope is their good and profite who are corrected Heb. 12. 10. That they may be made pertakers of his holinesse and consequently of eternall happinesse vers 14. And seeing of God in glory 2. How comes it to passe that David exercises such cruelty after his Victory against the Ammonites in all their Cities Which may be thought unbeseeming to so pious a Prince as David I answer that this was not without the speciall providence of God avenging himself by David on such wicked idolatres as those were 1 King 11. 5. And who had ever been capitall Enemies to his people rising up against them in the wildernesse and in their journey to Canaan Deut. 2. 18. As also rising up against them in the dayes of Jephtah Judg. 11. 32. And thereafter coming against Jabesh Gilead in the dayes of Saul and who would not make peace with them except all the Citizens would thrust out their right eyes 1 Sam. 11. 2. Thereafter doing such a barbarous indignity to the messengers of David and hyring the Syrians to joyn with them against oath and covenant and making warre against David for all these their wi●kednesse and provocations the Lord makes David now when their cup is full to recompence them according to their works and to be exemplar to others in their sharp punishment as they had been in their grosse sinning OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 13. UPon the Prophets reprehension and threatning David humbly confesses his sin Where we see the fruit of reprehension and the efficacy of Gods Spirit con●urring with the faitfull discharge of the Ministriall function towards sinners for their conversion as we see here in David and Act. 2. 23. and 37. Let Pastors then do their duty and leave the event to God Also we see what long and dead sleeps the holiest soul may take in sinne till God awake them out of that lethargy as David lay in neer nine moneths 2. We see the difference between the godly and the wicked● when they are admonished and rebuked for there sinnes the wicked either mock and despise rebuke threatnings as the first World did Noah and the wicked impenitent Jewes did the Lords Prophe●s that he sent unto them 2 Chron. 36. 16. Or else they fret and are inraged against them and abuse them as Ahab was inraged against Eliah and Herod against the Baptist but the godly to whom God mindes mercy and not judgement they receive the word of rebuke with meeknesse as David did here and confesse their sin resolving to mourn and mend as we see Hos 14. 2 3. Gods people are exhorted to do 3. We see here likewise in Davids confession a good example to be followed that he layes not his sin on others as Adam did nor denyes it as Cain nor extenuates it as Saul but freely acknowledges it and layes the blame onely upon himself saying I have sinned against the Lord and as he sayes Ps●l 51. 4. Against thee thee onely have I sinned and done this evil in thy s●ght 4. In Nathans reply saying The Lord hath also put away thy sinne c. We see here as also in the parable of the prodigall Son and as is said Psal 103. 8. Joel 2. 13. Jonas 4. 2. And Micah 7. 18. That he is slow to anger but ready to forgive and plentious in mercy yea who delights therein therefore no sooner doth David confesse but as soon by his Prophet doth he pronounce forgivenesse no sooner did the theef on the crosse pray for Christs remembrance of him when he came to his Kingdome but as readily did he answer and promised it to him which is a great comfort to all penitent sinners and that a bruised reed he will not breake nor a smoaking flax he will not quench Also that confession is the way to get pardon from God which is contrary before Earthly Judges Prov. 28. 1. 1 Joh. 1. 9. 5. Vers 14. Yet Nathan shewes David that the Childe that was borne to him should dye because he had given great occasion to the Enemies of the Lord to blaspheme whereby we see what advantage the scandalous sinnes of Professours give to the Enemies of the truth and what wicked and evill use they make thereof which should make all Professours of the truth to walke the the more circumspectly and holily Least through their sides the profession it self be wounded as well as their own souls and the Lords name blasphemed 6. In the death of the Childe which is threatned we see that the sinnes of parents are punished oftimes in the Persons of their Children according to that threatning Exod. 20. 6. They being as it were a part of their parents flesh of their flesh and bone of their bone which should make parents who would wish their Childrens welfare to feare God the more and to eschew sin and when sicknesse death or any disaster comes to their Children to examine themselves if their sins have been the cause thereof 7. Vers 15. It is said that according to Nathans prediction and threatning the Lord stroke the Childe with sicknesse where we see 1. That Gods threatnings shall assuredly be accomplished and therefore are not to be despised as those did of the first world and others 2 Chron. 36. 16. But made use of for our humiliation 2. That sicknesse is the Lords rod wherewith he striks either young or old and therefore when it comes we should look up to the hand that striks therewith kisse the rod by patient submission and bearing the same and by humble recourse to him who laid on the rod to seek to sanctify the same to us for our profite that we may say with David Psal 119. 71. It I was good for me that I was afflicted and to take off the same in his own good time 8. V. 16. David uses prayer and humilliation for the Childs recovery if it were the Lords will to be gracious unto him as he speaks Vers 22. Which teaches us that the onely way to avert and remove the Lords temporall judgements or any corporall visitation on our selves or ours is prayer and fasting and the humbling our selves before the Lord as we see we are exhorted Joel 2. Hos 6. 14. And was practised by David 2 Sam. 24. And here as also by the King of
also his subtilty appears That Vers 22. he never spoke good or bad to Amnon towit of that subject of the rape or forcing of his Sister by quarrelling with him for the same that so he might conceale his malice till he found occasion to put the same in execution and so he was past Master in the rule of courteous dissimulation and in all this and above all we see his irreligious contempt of God or his commandements and that he regarded onely the wrong that was done to Tamar but not the offence that was done to God 2. In David we see his errours were 1. His too great indulgence to his Sonnes whereupon proceeded his facility without suspition to believe and obey them And 2. his negligence in his office as a Magistrate who should have punished Amnon for his incest deserving death and which he neglecting is thus punished and revenged by Absolon to his great grief and in Gods just judgement 3. In Amnon his errour was the want of the remorse of conscience for his incest and his sleeping in security seeing for the space of two years nothing was said unto him by Absolon or done unto him nor expected by him 4. In Absolons servants we see their vice and wickednesse was their base slavery whereunto they subject themselves to betray and murther the Prince upon the onely warrant of their Masters command and authority misregarding both Gods command and the Kings authority or considering the cause on consequence of the fact 5. In the rest of the Kings Sonnes we see their imprudence to have committed themselves all at one time to have been at such a banquet as also their negligence in being onely spectatours and not seeking any way to hinder the fact 6. In Jonathan we see the patterne of a temporising and dissembling courtier favouring and following them by whom they may best stand and framing his speeches all to that end Fourthly the form of the practising and execution of this bloody fact is extended in all the circumstances thereof 1. The time was after two full years and at the shearing of sheep which was usually celebrated with a publick feast as we see Gen. 38. and 1 Sam. 25. At which time Absolon takes occasion to invite the King and his Sonnes and particularly Amnon to his feast of sheep-shearing and then to murther Amnon 2. The place is Baalbazor which bordereth with Ephraim 3. The occasion is Absolons earnest invitation of the King and all his Sonnes to his banquet which when the King had refused to go he presses him that Amnon should go which at last the King grants and that all his other Sonnes should also go with him 4. The manner of the acting is when all are come the banquet is begun with great mirth and liberall entertainment especially in drinking of Wine that Amnon being drunk might make the lesse resistance therefore Absolon gives commandement to his servants when they saw him so that then they should kill him upon his warrant and authority which accordingly they wickedly perform Last of all the consequents are the Kings Sonnes flie David and all his servants mourne Jonadab mitigates the first report and in a manner excuses Absolon for the fact and Absolon flieth and goeth to Geshur where he remained three years OBSERVATIONS 1. IN Amnon before and now in Absolon both Israelites and professours of the true worship of God and members of the visible Church We see grosse and wicked crimes of uncleanesse in the one and cruelty in the other which shewes us that it is not enough to be professours of the truth of the Christian name or will ever that avail us to salvation if our practise be contrary to our profession but our guiltinesse is the greater that we dishonour our holy profession by our unholy life mocks God giving him words but our reall service to Satan makes the Enemies to blasphmy and brings destruction upon our own souls 2. Vers 1. Two full years Amnon sleeps in security before his incestuous fact is punished whereby we see 1. The Lords long suffering patience all this while which he abused and should have led him to repentance And 2. albeit sinners through Satans subtilty lie sleeping in security yet the Lords justice and their deserved punishment sleeps not but though he come with leaden feet yet he comes at last with an iron hand to crush them in pieces 3. Amnon had escaped punishment which David as the Magistrate ought to have inflected impartially according to the Law which was one of the causes of his security but he could not escape that punishment which God in his just judgement had ordained for him therefore let none though never so great Prince● as Amnon was or others dreame of impunity for sinne for assuredly howsoever they may escape the hand of man the hand of God in his own time shall reach them 4. Absolon had all these two years harboured in his heart this hatered and inveterate malice which he had against Amnon and which now he was to put in execution whereby we see where Satan once gets possession of the heart as he got also of Cains and Iudas he will never rest till he bring that wicked seed sown and rooted there till a full harvest perfection as he did this inveterate hatered of Absolons towards Amnon Which ended in a cruell murther And that evill determined courses die not as oftimes the good does Before their performance 5. Absolon invited all the Kings Sonnes to a banquet and in speciall Amnon whom he intended to murther as we see Vers 26. So that it is no new thing to see foulest practises varnished over with fair pretences as in that fact of Simeon and Levi against the Sechemites the fast indicted by Jesabells means for killing of Naboth and here Absolons inviting of Amnon to a feast intending to murther him This also is the practise of Satan in tempting to sinne he layes before them pleasure or profite and the like and invites them as it were to taste and take of these baits intending their destruction as it is 〈◊〉 〈…〉 decipit auceps whereunto we oppose omnibus esca cibis ●r● s●besse puta 6. Vers 25. King David being also invited to this banquet refuses to go but he blessed Absolon who was accursed of God and going about a cursed and 〈◊〉 fact Which teaching us that man blesseth in vain where the Lord blesseth not and therefore Children should earnestly desire that with parents blessing which is onely optative the Lord would joyn his blessing which is operative and so carry in a holy course of life that the one may concurre with the other 7. Vers 27. After that David had denyed that Amnon should go yet through Absolons●ressing ●ressing he consents at last that he and all other his Sonnes should go Where we see what importunity doth produce and especially by servent and frequent prayer and waiting what is produced at the hands of God our heavenly
Reh●boant and his young Counsellours And here David and Joab whereas it was better when Saul was counselled by Samuel David by Nathan and Gad that Achab had been guided by Eliah Rehoboam by the old Counsellours and when the good Kings of Judah were ruled by the true prophets for then was the estate of the republick happy and prosperous 21. Vers 22. Joab humbly thanks the King for fulfilling his request though in an unlawfull thing that as we heare hereafter tended to his hurt vers 30. How much more then should we be humbly thankfull to the King of Kings who so often fulfilleth our requests in pardoning us and in many things that tend to our good here and eternall salvation hereafter 22. Vers 23. Joab being the Kings Generall of his Armies goeth himselfe to Geshur and with great solemnity brings back Absolon to Jerusalem who should rather have suffered death there for the murther of his brother then to have been so honoured But oftimes this is the custome of the world that vertue suffers when vice is rewarded Whereas the duty of the Magistrate is to cherish vertue and chastise vice as is said tolle malos extolle pios These being the two pillars of a Common-wealth the reward of vertue and punishment of vice else who shall follow the one and flie the other 23. Vers 24. Davids condition upon which he grants to Absolons reduction that he should turne to his own house and not see his face Proceeds from worldly prudence to please the people like Sauls sparing of Agag and the best of the cattle for sacrifice but was contrary to the law of God any such mitigation which required that the murtherer should dye the death and the land thereby be purged of blood Which should teach all Magistrates to make Gods Word and the lawes to be the rule of their actions in punishing of vices and not to dispence with Gods law through humane policy and wisdome 24. Vers 25. Absolon is here commended for his beauty of body which was outward but wanted that inward beauty spoken of Psal 45. 13. and 110. 3. And without which the outward is but like a ring of gold in a swines snout Whereas beauty with vertue especially humility and chastity is like a pearle in a gold ring Wherefore let every one that has bodily beauty seek for the inward beauty of grace and vertue as Joseph had without which it will be more hurtfull than profitable as we see in Dinah and Tamar and here in Absolon And such as want bodily beauty strive to have spirituall beauty that so they may be like the vine which though it want outward beauty yet brings forth most pleasant and comfortable fruit 25. Vers 26. Absolom takes inordinate delight in his haire whereby he fostered that which in the end was his own destruction it being as the rope that hanged him Where we see that it is the just judgment of God that worldly things wherein men inordinately delight become the occasion of their destruction as riches honour wit eloquence strength beauty and the like therefore let men to whom God has given any such gifts pray to God for the right use of them to his glory and their own good and that they be not like the rich foole or Haman Achitophel Tertullus Sampson or like Absolon here II SAM Chap 12. from the 1. verse to the 13. FOllowes the second part of the Chapter which is Absoloms reconciliation to his father David wherein is set down the time towit after two yeares dwelling in Jerusalem 2. The instrument which he uses to procure his reconciliation Who is Joab the same man that had procured his former reduction from Geshur 3. The manner how he uses Joab 1. By sending for him twise And 2. When he would not come by causing his servants to set his barly field on fire that what intreaty could not do coaction might enforce 4. Is set down Joabs coming unto him and asking the cause why he should have caused his servants to set his field on fire Whereunto Absolom answers that it was only by way of Stratagem because when he sent for him he would not come therefore he thought upon this occasion that he would not faile to come And then he laies out the cause why he sent for him which was to make known his condition to the King which he affirmed to be more tolerable in exile in Geshur than in that domestick exile from his fathers presence which he either desires or else that he would put him to a legall triall and kill him if he were found culpable In this offer confiding partly in his innocency who had done nothing but that whereunto he was provoked by a notable injury and partly confiding in his Fathers indulgence and clemency whose heart and affection he understood was towards him though he restrained his countenance for a time from him as Ioseph did from his brethren And 5. followes Ioabs delivery of his commission to David and thereupon as the event Absoloms reconciliation to his Fath●r who in token thereof as the custome was kissed him Having externally given all due reverence to his Father against whom notwithstanding inwardly he had hatch't a monstrous rebellion against both his life and honour as we shall shew God willing in the next Chapter OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 26. ABsoloms ambitious heart is mightily grieved as we see V. 32. That he is restrained from the court the Kings presence Which shewes us the torture and disquiet of proud Spirits that cannot attain to their ambitious desires so that it may be said of pride as is of envy Intactis vorat ossibus medullas and that it is a punishment to it self whereas the wise man sayes Bene vixit qui bene latuit As also what torture shall it be to be deprived of his presence for ever who is the King of Kings and of that fulnesse of joy that is therein Psal 16. 11. 2. Vers 30. Absolom extorts by force and violence what he could not obtain otherwise Wherein we see the nature of Tyrants that where they cannot allure men to meddle with them in ill courses they menace or oppresse them as experience teaches And so does enforce them 3. Absoloms servants do as their Tyrannous Master commands them and burne Ioabs barly field Where we see a new example of a wicked Master and of wicked servants as we saw before in the murther of Amnon 4. We see here likewise that Ioab receives a just recompence at the hands of Absolom proceeding from Gods just judgement punishing men who with dispensing with a good conscience and in ill courses or causes seek to pleasure the wicked 5. Vers 32. Where Absolom sayes If there be any iniquity in me let the King kill me We see the blind and impenitent heart that was in Absolom that having committed such a vile murther on his own Brother in such a treacherous and base way yet would plead innocency that there was
his treason which is Hebron in the Territory of Judah 15. Miles distant from Jerusalem where the sepulture of the Patriarchs was belonging to the Levites which place he chooseth not as he pretended for any act of Religion or serving of God there but as fittest to act his conspiracy there and to set himself down in the throne that same place were David his Father beganne his raigne and so to serve Satan and his owne ambition The third circumstance is the manner how he advances his rebellion which is 1. By taking with him in company 200. men from Jerusalem whom he had invited to take part of his feast at the paying of his vow in Hebron who went with him in the simplicity of their hearts knowing nothing of his treasonable design 2. He sends spies through the Land to try the disposition of the people and who were on his side or no and with them he sends Trumpeters and that these spies might inform the people that as soon as they heard him proclaimed King they might joyn with him 3. He sends for Achitophel Davids prime Counsellour the better to colour and promote his conspiracy and that the people might see that the wisest of the Kingdome and his Fathers chief Counsellour was on his side Whereupon a great confluence of people comes unto him and the conspiracy becomes strong thereby Some being deceived and thinking it had been by his Fathers appointment as was Solomons afterwards others affecting novelty and their own advancement and others who were not answerable to the Lawes being glad of alteration and as we say to fish in troubled waters OBSERVATIONS 1. IN the observations or application of this History I will follow the method of the actours and persons which are five 1. David 2. Absolom 3. The spies 4. The people 5. Achitophel 1. On Davids part in History we see in this act the just judgement of God on the perverters of justice especially in the matter of murther and bloodshed in not punishing the same according to the Law therefore Absolom who first took Amnons life the Son being spared now hunts after the life also and estate of the Father Let Magistrates therefore if they love their own security draw the sword of justice against vice and especially against that crying sinne of bloodshed impartially 2. In the Mystery in Davids troubles and his adherents here we see typified the condition of Christ and his Church against whom not onely open Enemies arose and bloody persecuters but also domesticke Enemies as pernicious Heretickes professing the Christian name and yet oppugning the truth of Jesus Christ and persecuting the true professours thereof as did the Arrians especially and as now do the Pope and Papists 3. Next in the Person and actings of Absolom in the History we see the example of a youth possest with all sort of vices like a legion of Divells as pride cruelty dissimulation fraud hypocrisy unnaturall rebellion Athiesme and in a word a Masse of monstrous impiety Whereupon we learn what man is by nature being unregenerate As we see Gen. 6. 5. And that goodnesse comes not by generation but by grace and regeneration As we see in the similitude of the pure grain that is sown whereof groweth that which hath both a win chaffe and straw Which should teach parents to pray for grace to their Children to curb vice in them timely and to bring them up in vertue and correction not being too indulgent and to remember that which is said Quod nova testa capit inveterata sapit 4. Absolom likewise and his followers in Mystery represents the malignant Church persecuting the true and the rising of Antichrist resembled here by him by counterfeit profession of great humility as a servant of servants and simulate piety being called therefore his holynesse and going about in deep hypocrisy to act the Mystery of iniquity thereby to dethrone Christ who is the onely head and King of his Church and to inthrone himself as head and monarch thereof for which he has his spies and Trumpeters as his emissary Priests and Jesuites in all Lands whereby multitudes which he makes a note of his Church are made to follow him which many do like the 200. that went with Absolom in the simplicity of their hearts and such a few number who follow Christ and his truth like these who followed David he cruelly did ever persecute to the death as the two witnesses were Revel 11. Having not onely policy like Achitophels wisdome but also power on his side as we see Revel 17. 12 13. 5. Absolom likewise we see rises not in open rebellion at first nor to the hight of his impiety but by degrees getting Chariots horses and a Princely attendance first and then preparing the peoples affections and fitting all other things for his purpose This being Satans craftines sowing first the seeds of sinne in the heart which therefore we are exhorted to keep with all diligence Prov. 4. 23. As he did the tares in the Lords field and then fomenting the same by all means possible till at last it come to the ripe harvest and burst forth openly as we see Judas covetousnesse did in betraying Christ Absoloms hatred in killing of Amnon and his pride here in rebellion against his Father And in Mystery as we may see in that defection of the Roman Church to grosse idolatry of worshipping of images and reliques prayer to sancts and Angels going in pilgrimage adoration of the hoste and the like all which rose from small beginnings at first and plausible pretences as we see Coloss 2. 23. These qualities also which being single grace others seem to have conspired to meet in Absolom goodlinesse of person magnificence of state gracious affability humility in greatnesse fellowfeeling sympathy love of justice care of the Commonwealth and exemplary piety and yet all in hypocrisy playing with God that he may deceave men O damnable vice justly therefore adjudged to the lowest Hell 6. Vers 2. Absolom to promove his purpose rises up early every day Which shewes us the restlessenes of insatiable pride till it attain its intent and how busy an agent the Divell is in driving on wicked men to the acting of wicked courses like Jehu marching furiously till they have accomplished their designe as we see here in Absolom as also in Judas selling of Christ and betraying him and as is said Prov 4. 16. Of the wicked that they sleep not except they have done mischief 7. Vers 3. and 5. In Absoloms flattering speech and putting forth his hand to them that came neer him and taking of them kissing them We see the nature of wicked men who will be content to use most base flattery and dissimulation and to stoope farre under their rank thereby to attain to their own ends Of which therefore it is prudence to beware 8. In his accusing his Father of negligence in the administration of justice and so to bring him in disgust and malgrace
with his subjects We see that it is the very first precept and practise in the black art of sedition and rebellion to flatter the people and to accuse the Magistrate and lay upon him the foulest aspersions that they can devise that by blameing the present Government and calumniating boldly them who are in place they may first as Absolom did here steale the hearts of people from them and so make them naked and thereafter engage them to themselves and so work the point of their own preferment But as is said Prov. 12. 3. a man shall not be established by wickednesse 9. Vers 4. Absolom vaunts greatly and promises much of himself if he wee made Judge whereby howsoever he pretended great humility in his gesture yet he discovers great pride in his words for vice cannot hide it self long and in a most unseemly way he praises himself where Prov. 27. 2. It is said Let another man praise thee and not thine owne mouth a stranger and not thine own lips 10. Vers 7. Neer after 40. years that his Father had raigned Absolom hatches and brings forth this monstrous brood of rebellion in his Fathers old age and latter time of his raigne which as it shewes his great impatiency who could abide his fathers death and his ambitious thirst to raigne so it shewes a wicked disposition of a Son crossing his father most when most he should have comforted him 11. Absolon pretends that his going to Hebron was to pay there a religions vow to God and to serve him Where we see that the pretending of Religion has been ever made a cloake to palliatall treasonable and wicked designes like Satan who when he intends greatest mischiefe he transformes himselfe into an Angel of light and Antichrist to deceive Gods people the more subtilly is described Revel 13. 11. By that beast that is horned like the Lamb but speaks like the Dragon This also we may see in that cruell practise of Simeon and Levi against the Shechemites and here in Absoloms against his own Father so that the fouler fact is it seeks ever the fairest visard 12. Vers 10. Thirdly in the spies and trumpeters that were sent out by Absolom through all the tribes of Israel to proclaim him King We see that rebellion and wicked courses never wants wicked instruments to promote the same as we see not only in Scripturall examples but in later times whereof Sleidan in his Commentaries lib. 5. makes mention And how that Luther in his speech and answer to the desires of the commons in Germany who rose up in rebellion against their Princes speaking of certain preachers who stirred up and fomented that rebellion he saies Satanas enim sub Evangelii pretextu multos hoc tempore seditiosos plane sanguinarios excitavit doctores such as the Pope also sends forth that Jesuiticall brood who are those uncleane spirits like froggs which go forth unto the Kings of the earth to gather them to battle to the great day of the Lord Revel 16. 13 14. And which I would to God we had not such even in our times amongst us 13. In the 200 also that followed Absolom in the simplicity of their heart not knowing any thing of his conspiracy We see in former times and even now likewise how many follow that Roman Antichrist in like manner in the simplicity of their hearts not knowing the depth of Satan nor the mistery of iniquity and being only of the number and name of the beasts that is counted and called Roman Catholicks but not having the marke of the beast and the deep impression thereof as we see Revel 13. 17. 14. Lastly Vers 12. In Achitophels joyning with Absolom We see the image of a temporising Polititian and Courtier quitting his loyalty to his old Master David and now cleaving to him whom he thought to be the sunne rising and joyning his wit with Absoloms forces to promote an ill cause which brings him therefore at last to an ill end Also we see what trust can be in flesh and blood when not only Davids Counsellour turnes traitour but also he is not safe from one of his own loynes II. SAM from the 13. Verse to the 30. FOllowes now the other two parts of this Chapter The first whereof is Davids patience and course that he takes by flying whereby he declines the fury of his sonne Absolom And 2. Ittai the Gittite his constant and faithfull cleaving to David in his distress as Ruth did constantly cleave to Naomi and would not leave her Ruth 1. 16. and this is to the 24. vers The second is Davids prudence 1. In sending back Zadok with the Ark to Jerusalem and appointing his sonne and the sonne of Abiathar who went back with their fathers to be Davids intelligencers And this to the 31. vers 2. In sending likewise Hushai the Archite to insinuate himselfe into Absoloms favour and countermine the counsell of Achitophel and by the sonnes of Abiathar and Zadok to certifie him of every thing which he heard In prosecuting of the first part of Davids patience and flieing for the time We shall consider 1. If flieing in the time of persecution be lawfull or agreeable to Christian fortitude 2. The causes of Davids flieing at this time 3. The fact it selfe and circumstances thereof And 4. The company or associates of David herein For resolution then of the first we distinguish flieing in time of persecution in three kinds The first is desertion The second defection The third is retreat I call desertion a desperate abandoning and deserting of a good cause I call defection not only a desertion of a good cause but also the profession of the contrary And I call retreat a necessary giving place or ceding to violence or flieing therefore for time and place As for the first two sorts there is no question but they are unlawfull as well in causes civill as religious But as for the third 1. We have Christs precept to his disciples Matth. 10. If they persecute you in one Citie flie to another 2. We have the examples of Jacobs flieing to Laban from the furie of Esau Gen. 27. Moses flieing from Pharaoh to the land of Midian Exod. 2. David from Saul 1 Sam. 19. And here from Absolom Eliah from Ahab Joseph and Mary from Herod to Egypt with the Child Jesus and his disciples from one place to another as they were commanded Which must be done notwithstanding upon these cautions 1. That above all respect be had to the glory of God and good of his Church which must be preferred to our personall safety 2. That respect be had to our lawfull calling And 3. That in all these two extremities be eschewed to wit Temeritie and Timiditie that men neither expose themselves to unnecessary dangers neither yet for carnall feare refuse those that are necessary when God calls them thereto for witnessing of the truth The second is the causes which moved David at this time to flie which are 1.
were the Author of sinne Whereunto I answer 1. That hereby is not meant that Shimei had any commandement from God as a warrant whereon he could grond that sinnefull action of his which doubtles he had then alleadged and afterward when he excused himself Chap. 19. Because in Gods Word an expresse commandment is in the contrary Ezod 22. 28. Saying Thou shall not revile the Gods nor curse the ruler of thy people and God cannot be contradictour to himself and therefore these words Vers 10. The Lord hath said unto him curse And vers 11. The Lord hath bidden him are not to be taken properly as any such warrant of Gods Word or commandement to do so but onely to shew how David took that cursing as a correction for his sinne from a just God See the like Isa 10. 6. as if he had said to Shimei curse David or as he had bidden him curse which made him to be so patient then and afterward Chap. 19. 23. And not to suffer Abishai to revenge it 2. In this sinnefull action of Shimei's as in others the like we must consider that these three have a hand and each one their severall ends towit Satan stirring up Shimei's lurking malice now to break forth in cursing and casting stones at David whose end herein was to afflict and trouble David more and more now in his distresse the next is Shimei obeying Satans instigation acteth this sinnefull deed out of the hatred of his heart Whose end therefore herein was wraithfull revenge The third is God making use of this their sinnefull action to the correction of his servant whose end was his own glory and his servants good As Joseph speaks of his brethrens wrong done to him Gen. 50. 20. Ye thought evill against me sayes he but God meant it unto good the like may be said of Amnons incest with Tamar and Absoloms with his Fathers Concubines as also Absoloms murther of Amnon and his rebellion now against his Father that Nathans prophesy concerning both might be fulfilled and in like manner in Christs delivering up to death wherein God had an hand and is said to have done it Rom. 8. 32. For the redemption of mankinde and Satan had an hand in it who entred into Judas heart out of malice to Christ and as Enemy to mans redemption and Judas had a hand in it for his owne wicked end to satisfy his covetousnesse These wicked ends in these two wicked actours making the act sinnefull in them which in God directing it to his glory and mans good is the greatest testimony of his over-ruling power and love to mankinde So likewise in Iob 1. 21. and Isa 10. 5 6. The same is evident as here in Shimei's fact God wills that as Davids chastisement which he hates as Shimeis wickednesse so that wicked men are never the freer from guilt and punishment for that hand which the holy God has in their sinnefull actions OBSERVATIONS 1. IN Ziba and Shimej Absolom and Achitophel recorded in this Chapter We see the memory of their wicked deeds dye not as themselves did but the same survives to the posterity in the publick register of sacred history as on the contrary the good deeds of the Godly survive in the same register to their eternall praise and for others imitation as it is said of Maryes breaking of the box of oyntment which she powred on Christs head that it should be recorded wheresoever the Gospell should be preached Which should serve to the disswading of men from doing of evill and to the encouragement of well doers especially when they consider at the last day how both good and evill works shall be remembred and have their severall rewards given to them accordingly And how they survive men even in this life as it is said post fata facta 2. Vers 2. Ziba under a faire pretence and profession of love to David but out of selfe-love only to himselfe hunts after his own gaine and preferment Which shewes the disposition of many crafty worldlings who under a faire shew of religion to God or love and respect to others have their own private and selfish ends which they propose making their gaine to be Godliness but not Godliness to be gaine and pretending love to others by their smaller gifts which like crafty fishers or fowlers they use as baits only to attaine to greater being as one saies more skilfull in the Ablative than liberall in the Dative and like that woman who swept the house not for love of clean-lines but to find out the lost groat pretending love to religion and reformation but intending their owne sacrilegious gaine and ambitious preferment 3. Vers 3. Ziba likewise to attain to his forenamed end by calumnies and false accusation he sowes sedition between David and his loyall and true subject Mephibosheth Which shewes that they who are greedy of gaine and preferment will let loose reines to all sort of wickedness whereby they may attain to their end even to take away the life of man As we see in Judas and here in Ziba accusing his Master of less Majesty and treason 4. In Ziba likewise we see the pattern of a wicked and ungrate servant leaving his impotent and lame Master at such a time of danger to which he did not only expose him but also did back-bite him falsly and sought himselfe to be possessour and owner of his Masters estate whereof before he had the trust only and government So little trust is to be had in men and especially worldlings and such as want the feare of God 5. Vers 4. David who had overcome the sword of many and mighty enemies before and Absoloms great Army hereafter Yet is himselfe overcome by a small gift and a flattering lying tongue of Ziba Which shewes how dangerous and of what great power insinuation by gifts and flattery is even to the best and that oftimes what may not be obtained by force is obtained by fraud which made Satan after his persecution of the Church like a reed Dragon to turn himselfe next into an Angel of light and the vicar of his power to be horned like the lamb though he spake like the Dragon Whereby he attained to so great and universall a following as we see Revel 13. The like effect of which fraud and flattery we see also in Satans deceiving of our first parents 6. David without triall of the truth or hearing first the party accused pronounces through rash crudelity an unjust sentence against just Mephibosheth in favours of an unjust calumniator and so sinneth against the duty of a just judge or Magistrate Which should teach all judges or men in place and power to beware of rash credulity and to trye well before they trust or decree in judgment 7. David under the rod suffers wrong patiently and yet under the same does wrong unjustly Which shewes unto us the frailty and infirmities that are in the best that none should confide in their own strength but
not onely spurring him on but also his ambitious aspiring not contenting himself with the Counsell table but to be also a commander and supream in the camp which has ever bene the bane both of the Common-wealth as also of the Church when men cannot content and contain themselves within their own station but ambitiously aspire above or beyond the same and will have a hand in all causes and rule both in Church and Commonwealth as especially the Popes their practise has been according to the saying of one Ecce duo gladii and of too many others 3. Vers 2. He vants and like another Goliah bragg's that he will do much without saying if God will where we see the truth of that which is spoken of the wicked that God is not in all their thoughts but they presume of their own strength and sacrifice to their own net which tendeth ever to their own destruction 4. He promises that he will come upon David unexpectedly and will make him afrayd and thereafter smite him and put all his Army to flight where we see the blind pride of the wicked speaking of events as if they were not in Gods hand who is the Lord of hostes but as if events and the lives of Gods Children were in their hands Although they have not power of one hair of their head without the good providence of God and as Davids preservation testifies As also as we see Act 23. 12. c. 5. He sayes likewise that he will come upon David while he is weary and weakhanded and in the night time so that like a subtile and sedulous Enemy he resolves to take hold of all advantages and make use thereof against godly David to his destruction The like subtile and sedulous Enemy have all the godly Satan who spies all his advantages of our weaknesse and makes use thereof to surprise us and bring us to destruction as we may see in Lot in Zoar in David with Beethsheba and Peters denyall and other godly men Let be in the wicked which should learn us to work out our salvation with fear and trembling and to watch and pray as our saviour exhorts us 6. Vers 4. It is said that this wicked Counsell of Achitophels of smiting the Father Vers 2. Pleased Absolom the Sonne well where we see the unnaturality of a wicked Sonne seeking after his life who gave him life and that where grace is not no expectation of duty is to be expected from the neerest naturall relations as we see in Cham Cain and here in Absolom 7. Vers 5. Though Achitophels Counsell pleased Absolom yet he acquiesces not therein but calles Hushai and asks his Counsell in this prosecution of the warre whose Counsell he asked not before in going in to his Fathers Concubines Where we see the Lords mercifull providence towards Hushai and in him towards the godly preserving them from many snares wherin they otherwise might fall as he did David from going with Achish against Saul 1 Sam. 29. And Hushai here from joyning in that wicked Counsell of Achitophels for Absoloms committing incest with his Father Concubines O happy then are they who rely on God 8. Vers 7. We see the modesty of Hushai in relation to the person of Achitophel though he opposes his Counsell or opinion not denying but he was a wise Counsellour and that his Counsell was good but not at this time Which shewes that in disputes or differences of judgements reflections on persons or bitternesse and the like should not be used but such modesty as verity may have place the cause it self handled unity sought after charity shewn humour and spleen avoyded and the way of reconciliation no wise obstructed Therefore Hushai to sweeten his opposition he yeilds the praise of wisdome to his adversary in other Counsells that he may have leave to deny it modestly in this 9. Yet in Hushai's boldnesse and freedome without fear in opposing Achitophels Counsell We learn what should be the like in the servants of God in opposing themselves with courage and zeal against errour and every wicked course which is against God his Church people and the Lords anointed 10. Vers 14. Absolom preferreth Hushai's Counsell to Achitophels as the better Hushai's Counsell being for Davids good and that which he rejected being for his own good Where we see the mercifull overruling and secret providence of God for the good of his own comfort in adversity making all things work together for their best but to the worst of their Enemies Who dig a pit for others wherein themselves do fall 11. The likeliest devices we see doe not alwayes succeed God finds the meanes to crosse the Counsell of Achitophel by a lesse probable advice of Hushai who had neither so deep a head nor so sure a Counsell as Achitophels yet his tongue refutes Achitophel and diverts Absolom Hushai's tongue then and Absoloms heart is guided by a power above their own who as he gives utterance to the tongue so he gives successe to the words therefore Hushai shall prevail with Absolom that Absolom prevail not against David he that worketh all in all things so disposeth of wicked men that while they think that they most please themselves and think themselves safest then they overthrow themselves as we see Exod. 1. 10. And their disappointment is surest 12. The reason why Absolom obeys Hushai's Counsell rejects Achitophels sayes the text was that the Lord had appointed to defeat the Counsell of Achitophel as David had prayed Chap. 15. 31. And that the Lord might bring evill upon Absolom Where we see the efficacy of prayer and that the Lord doth hear and grant the prayers of his own according to Psal 50. 15. Which have a twofold effect for the good of the godly and the evill of their Enemies wherefore the armour of his Church most prevalent has been ever prayers and tears 13. We see here likewise that the greatest punishment of sinne and which bringeth all other evill with it is when men are left to the Spirit of errour and to reject good Counsell or courses and to embrace the worse II. SAM Chap. 17. from the 15. vers to the end FOllowes now 1. The action of Hushai and his complices revealers of his Counsell to David and the circumstances thereof 2. The Tragicall and ignominious death of Achitophel and the causes thereof 3. The marching of both Armies over Jordan and the severall encamping thereof And 4. the furnishing of Davids Army and provision thereof In the first action there are many actours 1. Hushai who is the revealer of the Counsell and first advertiser according to his promise formerly made to David 2. The two Priests directed back by David to Jerusalem from mount Olivet to the same purpose 3. Their Sonnes Jonathan and Ahimaaz appointed to be the beares of this revelation 4. Two Women the one a wench sent by the Priests from Jerusalem to their Sonnes swho abode at Enrogell the other a mans wife
the same to wicked ends Which teacheth us that Gods benefits should not be abused to sinfull ends else they will turne into curses as the subtilty of the Serpent Gen. 3. 1. Pharaohs working wisely Exod. 1. 10. Sampsons strength Absoloms beauty Haman and Judas preferment The Scribes and Pharise's learning Tertullus eloquence and here Achitophels wisdome 9. We see here likewise that worldly wisdome without grace and sanctification can be no protection from shame and ruine in the end a worldly losse a conceited affront a vexing fear an accusing conscience forseen danger and the like can soon render the life comfortles and oftimes drive a man to despaire and make him cruellest of any to himself How vain then is it to be wise except in God whose fear is the beginning of true wisdome and to depart from evill is true understanding 10. By this example also of Achitophels death whereunto like Judas he was stirred up by Satan as he had been formerly to sinne by pernicious Counsell We see what great cause all men have to pray as Christ hath taught us Lord lead us not into temptation and what Satan intends when he tempts to sinne towit nothing else but thereby to bring men to destruction 11. It is said that when Achitophel saw that this Counsell was not followed he hanged himself Where we see what an ill guest pride is which causes men to mis-interpret disgraces or overrate them and raise such a storme in the breast which cannot hardly be calmed without the death of the conceived disgracer or else their own the one whereof we may see in Hamans spleen against Mordecai and the other here in the Person of Achitophel whereas humility can easily digest great wrongs and misregard the misregarding of others 12. Achitophel puts his house in order who could not order his own unruly passion and affections and is carefull for the world which he was notwithstanding presently to leave to others but was carelesse of Heauen and of his own future and eternall estate Where we see how foolish and preposterous are the cares and courses of Worldlings who prefer earth to Heaven the goods to soule or body and the providing for others neglecting their own eternall welfare and running to everlasting ruine 13. Vers 22. When David had mustered his men beyond Jordan who had been passing it in the night time he lacks not one of them wherein the Lords gracious protection was seen to Davids great comfort and those who did follow him Whereas Chap. 18. 7. Their fell of the followers of Absolom 20000. men which should be a great incouragement to all men to follow good courses and favour good causes for such only have the promise of Gods preservation 14. Vers 24. It is said that after David had passed over Jordan Absolom also followed and all the men of Israel with him Where we see that the multitude is on Absoloms part and that it is not without cause forbidden to follow the multitude to do evill As we see in the practise of Noah and Lot so that multitude is no note of the true Church but the contrary as we see Revel 13. 12. Seeing it is the broade way that leades to damnation and many they are who do walke in it 15. We see here likewise by Absoloms following David over Jordan with so hugh a multitude as it were close at the back that when perills are greatest and neere then also is Gods deliverance neerest as we see in the next Chapter as likewise in Israels deliverance at the red Sea and from that bloody plot of Hamans David oftimes from Saul Daniel from the Lyons and the three Children from the fiery fornace so Matth. 8. 25. Act. 27. 23. and elsewhere 16. Vers 27. David from a wealthy and potent King is now brought to that estate that he is supported with food from meaner men his sinne brought him chiefly to this which shewes the mutability of greatest wordly estates whereunto none should trust nor think their mountain so strong that it cannot be moved but relye only on the Lord as David professeth Psal 23. 1. And to eschew sinne which is the cause of all misery both here and hereafter 17. David is persecuted by his own sonne and people but is pitied and provided for by strangers which is and ought to be a comfort to the Godly in affliction that God being their friend they shall never want friends nor provision but he that fed his people in the wilderness and Eliah by Ravens and the widdow of Sarepta who also provided Pharaohs daughter to be the nurse of Moses and Obadiah in Achabs Court to feed the Lords Prophets by fifties in caves will also provide for his own seeing he feeds the sparrowes and cloathes the lillies of the field and therefore much more will care for them that feare him Heaven then shall want power and earth meanes before that any such want maintenance and if God chastise or take with one hand he shall cherish and give with another II. SAM Chap. 18. from the 1. Verse to the 19. IN this Chapter is orderly subjoyned the history of the bloody battle between Absolom as pursuer and David as defender which is to be resolved in foure particulars 1. The discipline used by David in ordering and leading out his Army 2. The battle and event thereof 3. The report thereof made to King David 4. How he is passionately grieved for the death of Absolom First then the discipline and order which David uses in leading forth his Army is commendable for 1. He musters or counts them that hereby he may know their number see their Armes and consider their strength 2. After their muster he puts them under command of Captaines of hundreds and Colonells of thousands that the souldiers may obey their Captaines and the captaines their Colonells 3. He puts the regiments under three supreame Commanders or Generalls Joab Abishaj and Ittaj and divides his Army in three battalions or squadrons assigning their leading to the severall conductors Next when David has thus ordered the Army he offers as a valiant Captain to go with them to battle in proper person for to shew his courage and for their better encouragement But on the contrary by the secret Counsell and wisdome of God withdrawing David whose preservation was decreed as Absoloms destruction was concluded by drawing him to battle the people disswade David from going with them in person by reasons taken à commodo incommodo 1. They being the body and he the head their enemies will not greatly care for them though they dye or flie so long as the head is safe to renew the battle but if the head perish the body will likewise perish 2. Care should be had of his safety for the well of the body who is worth ten thousand of others and who if he should dye better ten thousand of the Army dyed 3. If he stay in the City and need be he can succour them out
us and as David looked unto when he mourned and fasted for the sicknesse of the first Child that was borne unto him by Bathsheba 10. Next his mourning and lamentation was with intuition of his spirituall and now eternall estate dying so without repentance in his sinnes of bloodshed incest and rebellion which s●ould be in like manner the chief cause of mourning to all who fear God when they their friends or any other of neerer relation to be wicked and incorrigible and running headlong to their own damnation and which was the cause of Samuels going to Ramah and mourning for Saul all the dayes of his life 11. Out of his two tender and fatherly affection he cryes out with ingemination My Son my Son Absolom would God I had dyed for thee Where we see that the best men have not wont to be least passionate but what shall we say of our Saviours love to us fervency thereof who has said of us wretched rebells Not would God I had dyed for you but I have dyed for you a bloody a painfull a shamefull and a cursed death Behold then how he loved us with a love matchlesse and marvellous in fruit like himself and incomprehensible whereat Angels stand amazed and wherewith Saints are ravished would God that we had hearts as we should to love him again II. SAM Chap. 19. from the 1. vers to the 16. AFter the History of the former battle are in this Chapter set down the consequences that followed thereon which may be called the generall argument thereof and may be divided in seven particulars The first whereof is the universall deploring of Absoloms death by the people following the Kings example to the 5. Verse 2. Is set down Joabs sharp and minatory reprehension of David for lamenting so for Absolom and his exhortation to shew himself cheerfull and to speak comfortably to the people to the 8. Verse Wherein also is set down Davids obedience to the Counsell of Joab 3. From the 8. Verse to the 16. Are set down the deliberations and resolutions of the tribes of Israel for the reduction and restitution of the King with the reasons thereof and David his sending of Zadok and Abiathar the Priests to the elders of Judah and to Amasa for their concurrance herein and the motives thereof with the successe that ensued 4. From the 16. verse to the 24. Is set down Shimei his meeting the King with a thousand men to conduct him His confession of his fault and begging pardon Abishais opposition thereto but Davids gracious granting the same and confirming it with an oath 5. From the 24. verse to the 31. Is contained Davids accusation of Mephibosheth that he went not with him Mephibosheths excuse thereof and laying the blame on Ziba his servant who unjustly had calumniated him then Davids decision of parting the Lands between them and Mephibosheths modest acquiscing thereto 6. From the 31. verse to the 40. Is set down Barzillai his meeting with David to conduct him Davids liberall offer to Barzillai for his former this his recent favour His modest refusall thereof with the reason of same and in his place the offer of his Sonne Chimham to go with David and to accept any favour that it pleased the King to bestow upon him whereupon David accepts the offer kisses and blesseth old Barzillai who returnes to his place 7. From the 40. verse to the end We have a sharp contest between the men of Israel and the men of Judah concerning their being first in the Kings reduction and that they despised the men of Israel being ten tribes or major part and had not first advised with them in bringing back the King As for the first consequence or action mentioned which is Davids mourning for the death of Absolom we have spoken before and here we see by his example and sympathy with him the Victory that day is likewise turned to mourning unto all the people and in place of their shewing themselves joyfull in a publicke triumphing way they privately steale into the Citie like them who are ashamed and steale away when they flye in battle And as for the King himselfe he covereth his face as the manner of mourners was and cryes out bitterly O my sonne Absolom my sonne my sonne Whereof Joab being advertised he comes to the King and boldly 1. Reprehends him for mourning so for Absolom and giving such a bad example to the people 2. Exhorts and counsells him to arise and go forth and to speak comfortably to the people And 3. Threatneth him if he did not so that he should be deserted by all the people speedily and that should be a worse evill to him then all the evill that had befallen him from his youth till then In his reprehension of David he upbraids him 1. With ingratitude that in place of honouring or rewarding his servants who had saved his life and the lives of his sonnes his daughters his wives and concubines he had shamed them by mourning for a traitour who sought his life and the lives of his servants and therefore had justly suffered and for which fact they needed not to be ashamed as it seemes he would have them 2. He upbraids him with the greatest iniquity that can be that he hated his friends and loved his enemies which might be a sufficient ground hereafter to any not to prove his friends as they had formerly done hazarding their lives and fortunes for him but to prove his enemies 3. He labours to prove the truth thereof by Davids so bitter mourning for Absolom whereby he declared that he regarded not his Princes or servants whom rather he should have cheerfully welcomed from the battle thanked or rewarded than withdrawne himselfe from them and mourned for a traitour 4. He upbraids him with a preposterous and wrong choice or election rather of Absoloms life though they all had died the last whereof had pleased him better then the death of Absolom 5. Unto this he therefore subjoynes his advice and exhortation that David go forth shew himselfe cheerefull for the victory and speak comfortably to his servants which if he obeyed not by an argument ab incommodo he threatneth him with a speedy and totall desertion of all the people and Army which he had under his charge and had hazarded so for him which would prove the greatest evill that ever as yet had befallen him Whereupon David is moved to do as Joab had advised he comes forth to publick view in the most publick place of the Citie the gate thereof which when the people heare the● they flock and resort unto him Followes next the strife that was throughout all the tribes of Israel that had adheared to Absolom before and being now defeated were ●led every man to his tent concerning the reduction and restitution of David to which they who were for him labour to perswade the rest 1. From the benefits which they had formerly received from him and whereof without
people The time then when this famine was is in the dayes of David neer the end of his raigne and after all his intestine troubles from the hand of man are setled then the Lords own hand exercises David and his people with a new correction Whose course for deprehension of the cause of which famine he takes is like a wise Physitian that seeks out the cause of the sicknesse first and so doth David and the person at whom he inquires is said to be the Lord who is an omniscient God and who laid on the rod and therefore could best tell for what cause he did it which inquiry was not immediatly by David himself but by the ordinary mean that was used towit by the mediation of the high priest before the Ark by Vrim and Thumim as was prescribed Numb 21. And unto which the Lord readily and cleerly answered shewed that it was for Saul and his bloody house in generall and more particularly because he slew the Gibeonites against oath and covenant and so joyned to cruelty the fearfull sinne of perjury Thus David having found out the cause comes next to inquire at the Gibeonites who were the party offended what should be the remedy to whom the Gibeonites answer 1. Negatively that they would not have either Gold or Silver of Sauls or of his house 2. Neither that David should for them kill any man in Israell whereby they shew that they had no quarrell against the Nation in generall for that cruelty which Saul had used against them distinguishing so between a nationall and a personall quarrell and between innocents and guilty 3. They answer positively Vers 5. That they would demand by way of retaliation seven of Sauls Sonnes who had consummed them and devised to destroy them throughout all the coasts of Israel to be delivered to them and that they might hang them up unto the Lord as an atonement of his wrath against Israell for their King Saul his cruelty and perjury and in that very place which was called from his name Gibeah of Saul and where he was borne and bred 1 Sam. 10. 26. To which demand of their's David answered by granting the same onely he spared Mephibosheth the Sonne of Jonathan because of the Lords oath that was between David and him and delivered to them the two Sonnes of Rizpah Sauls Concubine and five others who are called the Sonnes of Michal Sauls Daughter not that she did ●ear them to Adriell who was their Father seeing she was childlesse to the day of her death but that she adopted them as Pharaohs Daughter did Moses and because of her education of them as if they had been her Sonnes and therefore it is said in the text Whom she brought up for Adriell who had to his Wife Merab Sauls eldest Daughter as we see 1 Sam. 18. 19. Who was naturall mother to these five Sonnes and probably was dead and therefore her Sister Michall had taken them to bring up These seven then being delivered the Gibeonites accordingly did hang them up on the hill before the Lord in the beginning of the barly Harvest which was in moneth which we call March Whom Rizpah out of naturall affection to her own two Sonnes and kindenesse to the rest did watch night and day that neither the birds should rest on them by day nor the beasts of the field by night should tear them and this she did from the beginning of the barly Harvest till rain dropped from Heaven upon them or that rainy wether began after the great drouth which had been before and caused the famine having spread sackcloth for her upon the rock in witnessing of her mourning for them where we have this doubt to be solved how are these suffered to hang so long seeing it expresly against the Law of God Deut. 21. 23. Which commandeth that the bodies of such shall not remaine all night upon the tree To which it is answered that the Law of God is made for man and not to controll the Author whose power is absolute and this fact like robbing of the Egyptians by the Israelites being extraordinare having a speciall warrant from the Oracle which was consulted no doubt their avent This fact of Rizpah being told to David he is so moved by her kindenesse to the dead as he follows her example herein by bringing the bones of Saul and Jonathan from Jabesh Gilead and honourable burying them in the sepulchre of Kish Sauls Father in Zelah of Benjamin as also in burying of the bones of these seven Sonnes of Saul that were hanged Whereupon the Lord was intreated for the Land and the famine removed Thereafter from the 15. verse to the end is set down the four successive and severall Victories which David and his servants obtained over the Philistines and in speciall over the Sonnes of a great giant Rapha the first whereof was David being present and in great danger by one of the Sonnes of the giant from which Abishai delivered him being faint by killing the Sonne of that giant who pursued him Whereupon Davids men resolve by an oath that he no more should go out with them to battel and hazard his person lest he thereby should quench the light of Israel The second and third battle was at Gob where the other two of the Sonnes of the giant were slain and the fourth and last battle was at Gath where the fourth Son of the giant was slain and so all his Sonnes who were borne unto him there perished OBSERVATIONS 1. BY this famine for the space of three years together after the sword We see that it is the lot of the Godly to be exercised with diverse crosses in this life as it is said many are the troubles of the righteous that so their hearts my be weaned from the love thereof and set upon the desire of a better life and on the right way to attain thereto were there is fulnesse of joy pleasures for evermore holynesse being the way to this happinesse 2. Vers 1. The continuance of this famine three years together makes David at last to inquire for the cause thereof Where we see that when any crosse or affliction continueth unremoved it should drive us to the inquisition and self tryall of the cause which while that be found out as Achans guiltinesse the rod will not be removed nor the plague cease 3. This famine is said to have continued three years Which shewes unto us that as the Lord is he who layes on the rod so likewise he limits the time of the laying on of the same as he did as long the people of Israell should be in Egypt and thereafter in Babylon Which should be an argument of patience under any crosse and of hope for a gracious deliverance in the Lords good time 4. David all these three years till at last inquires not of the Lord of the cause partly expecting the yearly removing thereof and partly because himself was not pinched therewith Which
sent it back on a cart drawn by beasts which seems to be the fault of the Levi●s who gave themselves too much herein to their own ease And David and all who were with him exprest great Spirituall joy in the performance of this Religious enterprise but because though it was bonum yet not bene performed therefore their joy is turned quickly into matter of grief and mourning by the sudden death of Vzzah without warrant for taking hold of the Arke when it seemed to stumble and fall being shaken by the oxen that bore it which as it greeved David so it greatly feared him to bring the Arke at that time any further to his own house at Sion and therefore carried it aside to the house of Obed-Edom where it remained three moneths during which time David hearing that the Lord had blessed the house of Obed-Edom his fear thereby being removed he was encouraged to attempt of new the perfecting of what he formerly intended and to bring from thence the Arke to his own house in Sion which accordingly he performed with all ●olemnity and expressions of joy and gladnesse and offering of sacrifices to the Lord. OBSERVATIONS 1. DAvid now being established in his Kingdome enjoying peace he applies his minde to the establishment of the Lords Arke and promoteing of his worship a worthy pattern to all Princes and Magistrates of imitation which whosoever have followed have prospered as on the contrary who have done otherwise they have been justly punished For who honours God them he will honour and who dispises him shall be dispised 2. Hence we see the errour of such who think that the care and reformation of Religion belongs not to Magistrates or laiks as they call them Princes being custodes utriusque tabulae and this having been ever the practise of the Godly Kings of Iudah who as their power was from God so they exercised it for God as the Godly Emperors did so in like manner 3. This purpose of his touching the Ark and religion he puts to execution by convocating the chiefe men of Israel of every estate consulting and concluding with them that by common consent and concurrance the same may be the better and more solemnly done every one assisting according to his calling but especially the chiefe part of this action belonging to the Levites where we have the example of a prudent King and of a Godly Councell and Parliament As we see was followed after by Constantine in the Councell of Nice Theodosius in Chalcedon In that of Ephesus likewise and Constantinople and in those religious Princes Edward the sixth and Queen Elizabeth of England 4. Vers 2. We see that the Ark which was a signe and symbole of Gods presence is called by the name of God himselfe the Lord of hostes which may serve to the comfort of his own and terrour of his enemies as in sacramentall speeches the name of the thing signified is given to the signe as has been said so that it is a wrong and vaine reasoning of the Papists to argue from these words this is my body that therefore the bread is turned in the substance of Christs body 5. Vers 3. The manner of carrying the Ark is by Oxen on new cart wherein we see two errours of the Levites 1. They leave the Word and ordinance of God which commanded that it should be carried upon the Levites shoulders And 2. They follow the example of the Philistines their sending back the Ark upon a new cart drawn by beasts which they do partly for celerity and partly for their own ease Where 1. we may see what is the rule in reformation or setting up of religion that it should not be by warrantable example or practise of others but by the direction and warrant of Gods Word 2. We may see what is the bane and ruine of religion when men give themselves to ease and the burthen of the Ministry is committed to lasie ignorant and unworthy beasts 6. Vers 5. The Ark is conveyed with musick of sundry sorts and great rejoycing which shewes 1. That the prospering of religion and advancement of all lawfull courses for the flourishing and establishing thereof should be the matter of our greatest rejoycing And 2. That musick and the art thereof is lawfull in the Church of God for praising of the Lord in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall songs 7. David is specially and first here named as ringleader in this holy exercise which shewes the duty of all Godly Magistrates and others in Prime place to go before Gods people in a good and Godly example of piety and religious exercises according as is said regis ad exemplum c. And not to be defective herein or givers of evill example as many do now a dayes 8. Vers 6. In the midst of this joy intervenes a sad and tragicall accident which obstructs the same by Vzza'hs unwarrantable laying hold on the Ark when it was shaken by the Oxen that bare it and his being suddenly striken dead for his errour by the Ark of God Where we see 1. How soon may our rejoycing or joy in this life be changed into matter of griefe and mourning such is the vicissitude whereunto we are here subject unto till we come to that fulness of joy Psal 16. 11. Which we shall only without interruption enjoy in the heavens 2. We see that Vzzah's good intention in holding up the Ark ●rom falling when it was shaken by the Oxen wanting a warrant and distrusting as it were Gods own care of his Ark makes not his action acceptable nor freeth him from errour ●nd punishment Neither will the good pretended intentions of my in the manner of Gods worship or other unwarrantable actions be an excuse unto them or free them from guilt and punishment as we see in the example of Nadab and Abthu and all will worship Col. 2. 23. 3. Where so good a man as Vzzah was so severely punished for such a small seeming errour as it might be called what may those expect who boldly commit grosse and scandalous sinnes without any remorse or amendment of life 9. Vers 7. Where it is said that for this fact of Vzzah though upon a good intention the anger of the Lord was kindled against him and he smote him for his errour c. We see that sinne and errour kindles Gods wrath and looses his hand of justice unto punishment therefore how watchfull and loath we should be to sinne as we would be loath and feare to kindle Gods anger against our selves and thereby to procure his judgments 10. Where it is said that God smote him and he died by the Arke we see that in the Lords hand is life and death and how suddenly he may inflict the same especially when we provoke his wrath and therefore we should eschew sinne the wages whereof is death and feare God as our Saviour exhorts us Who when he has killed the body can cast both soule and body in hell fire
Likewise we see that the Ark brings death and destruction to Vzzah but as after blessing to Obededom even so the right use or abuse of the Word and Sacraments brings the like to the right users or abusers thereof And we should feare with a prophane heart and hands to come and touch that holy Sacrament that is called Christs body and blood as the Ark was called the Lord of hostes 10. Vers 8. This sad accident produces in David 1. Grief or displeasure that the Lord had been so offended and made such a breach upon Vzzah And 2. Feare to bring the Ark of God at that time to his house at Sion Where we see 1. Davids Godly griefe that God should have been grieved at that which Vzzah unwarrantably had done against the Law which did inhibite that the Levites should otherwise carry the Ark but upon their own shoulders and not touch it otherwise but only by bearing it by the instruments and barres appointed for that purpose 2. That God should have been moved by their not taking heed to his ordinance and sinning thereby to have smitten Vzzah by so sudden and unexpected death which shewes 1. The griefe that Godly men have at the offence of God which is exprest Ezek. 9. 4. Jer. 9. 1. and Psal 119. 136. And 2. The sympathy that they have with others who for their errours are justly punished or chastised by the hand of God as fellow feeling members of one body And 3. How by the punishments of others they are instructed and feare to commit any like offence whereby Gods anger may be kindled against themselves 11. Whereas in remembrance of that punishment inflicted on Vzzah he called the name of the place Perez-Vzzah or the breach of Vzzah We see that not only the testimonies of the Lords mercy towards the Godly and their deliverances should be remembred but likewise the testimonies of his justice towards offenders The first to tye us to his obedience as by love cords the other to terrify us from offending his divine Majesty as we see Psal 119. 120. 12. Vers 11. This feare that David had of carrying the Ark at that time to his own house makes him to carry it aside to the house of Obed-Edom a Gittite where it remained three months during all which time the house of Obed-Edom was blessed To teach us that where religion and the Word of God and Sacraments gets footing there is and will be the blessing of the Lord as when Jacob was with Laban Joseph in Potiphars house and the widdow of Zarephath for her sustaining of Eliah Much more also is that soule blessed where Christ himselfe is suborned or his poore members 13. Vers 12. and 1 Chron. 15. 25. Where upon the report of the Lords blessing Obed-Edoms house because of the Ark. David of new againe enterpriseth the bringing of the Ark unto his house in Sion We see that good purposes should never be left off altogether although they find some rubs and impediments ●ast in the way through the policy of Satan or mens obstructions 14. One maine cause of this renewed enterprise is the report of the Lords blessing of the house of Obed-Edom not that David envyed the same but that he was desirous to be partaker of this blessing of the Lord by harbouring the Ark in like manner in his own house at Sion Which shewes the disposition of the truly Godly like Iacob they will wrestle for the blessing of God and will endeavour by all meanes and above all things to have the Lord to blesse themselves and their families and have the light of his countenance to shine upon them as Psal 4. 6. As also we see that it is good to be in a Godly family for there is the blessing of God 15. Vers 13. In the carrying of the Ark now this second time from the house of Obed-Edom to the Citie of David we see the former errour amended that the Levites bore the same as the Law commanded and therefore it had the better success Where we see that it is a token of great wisdome and grace to consider wherein any errour has been for which God has been angry and punished a land or persons and when they have found out 〈◊〉 same as Achan● fault was to redress the same as is done here 16. It is said likewise that when they that bare the Ark towit the Levites had gone six paces David sacrificed Oxen and Fatlings being mindfull of the Lords anger that burst forth in a temporall judgment against Vzzah for his errour that the Lord by these legall Sacrifices might be appeased if any like errour or provocation ignorantly should fal out in this second bearing of the Ark from the house of Obed-Edom as we see the like practise of Job 1. 5. Which teaches us to be still in feare to offend God in the meanest measure or manner and by a watchfull care so farre as in us lyes to prevent his displeasure 17. Vers 14. David also danced before the Ark girded with a linnen Ephod white being the colour of joy and linnen being light for use Which fact of his was extraordinary and therefore not to be imitated His dancing being a signe of the great joy of his heart upon this extrarodinary action of bringing the Ark from the house of Obed-Edom to his own house and this linnen Ephod not being a priestly or leviticall vesture but a covering of his royall under-apparell made of linnen like to an Ephod to witness his humility as we see Vers 22. And that he thought no disgrace in the Ephod as many do the office of the Ministry Whence we see also that with spirituall rejoycing and with humility the performance of religious duties should be but not from extraordinary outward practises to argue for the like ordinary performances that by Davids dancing before the Ark immodest lascivious dancing should be authorized which is for exciting of lust or other sinfull ends as that dancing was of Herodias daughter 18. The joy and rejoycing that is made by the King and people at the bringing up of the Ark shewes us what is and should be the right cause of the Godlies rejoycing even the establishing of Gods true religion from the highest to the lowest and not in things unstable and transitory as Nebuchadnezzar's storring was and the rich foole of the Gospell but let him that rejoyceth rejoyce in the Lord for there is nothing but this wherein we may not rejoyce either unme●sureably or unseasonably but in spirituall joy we can neither be out of time nor measure II SAM Chap 6. from the 17. verse to the end FOllowes now the fixing and establishment of the Ark in his place at Sion which David had prepared for it his sacrificing to the Lord and his blessing of his people and royall beneficence towards them after the performance whereof when he came into his house to bless his houshold likewise He finds a new matter of griefe and indignation